Coffee Roasting

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I remember reading about this thing over on the old CoffeeGeek website; the OXO Single Serve yada yada thing. (ed.note, it’s now on this new site too). A little $15 contraption that the review promised would do excellent pour over coffee, in a very automated format. You just add rinsed filter, freshly ground coffee, and hot water, then… just walk away. Walk away.

But what about swirling techniques? What about pause, pour, pause, pour, pause, pour? What about timing your pour to a flow rate of 2g of water per second? Whataboutdisms.

Anyway, I bought one. Saw it on the shelf at Target. Bought one. Brought it home, and forgot about it. Meanwhile, I’m plugging away, doing my pour over thing, getting it done, wondering if this patient swirling will really make a difference (hey, I got my technique from the Stumptown website, and after all, they know their biz, right?).

Then I saw the box sitting there on my bookshelf where I’d left it, and decided it was time to open it it. Thankfully it came with some filters because I don’t have any Melitta #2 filters around this Hario loving house. Dutifully cleaned it out, got my pour over kettle boiling (with its breathtaking long slender goose neck spout which, I dare did not know would become obsolete!) got the grinder cranking away (21g for a 320ml brew!) and set it all up. I gave the cone filter a good rinse with off-boil water, added the coffee, and rapidly poured water into the top reservoir, filling it to the 325ml mark. Put the lid on top and…

Walked away. Just walked away from it. Let it do it’s thing.

Well, that’s a lie. I watched. I may have even lifted the reservoir to see how it was doing. It wasn’t fully saturating the bed of coffee at first, but right away I noticed the flow was restricted out of the bottom of the brewer, which meant a nice coffee soup was forming on top in the filter chamber. Soon, everything was saturated. The coffee was blooming nicely, and everything just looked… good.

Amazingly, it took 3 minutes and 45 seconds (give or take) to do the full brew. Right around the time the super geeknerdy pros claim you should be doing. But all kind of automatic like.

Tasted it. Damn, this is a good cup of coffee! Tasted some more. NICE! Wow, this is pretty good!

It was maybe too good. So I busted out the V60, secretly cheered my kettle’s gooseneck to do a good job, and got to work. Water to 204F. 21g of coffee, ground fresh. Rinsed the heck out of that V60 paper filter. Plopped it into the glass V60 holder. Added my coffee, got the 204F Kettle making sweet love as it poured over the bed of coffee, but only 40g worth of water. Just double the coffee weight to saturate it, and pause 30 seconds. Now start the main brewing pour. Lovingly swirl and pour that stream in interesting circular patterns, all at a very slow flow rate. Provide the love and care that coffee deserves!

And nearly 4 minutes later, a finished brew. Gave it a taste. Damn, this is a good cup of coffee! But is better than the OXO plastic toy?

Erm.

Uhoh.

Well, you know how it goes here. I may not have a Q-Grader’s palette or the experience of a world barista championship judge, but I do think I know my tastes and especially my smells, and hand to chest truth here, if there’s any improved quality from the V60 brew vs the automatic OXO brew, I cannot taste it most days.

But I’m not giving up on the V60. I like the ritual of it. I like the ceremony. I like being that coffee nerd in my pack that does that pour dance thing while my friends roll their eyes.

With that said, when I just want a good coffee fast, without any effort at all, I now reach for the OXO brewer.

The OXO Single Serve Brewer is available on Amazon, and is still in the $16 range.

About the author

Zuzanna travels the world because of her job, and makes it a point to find the best cafes, best coffee, best espresso in every city, town, or village she visits.

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