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CoffeeSoldier@sh.itjust.worksOPto Coffee@lemmy.world•New Hybrid Recipe for the Hario Switch - Ninth Circle!English1·10 days agoThis is a nearly exclusively immersion recipe. It will brew a nice well rounded cup no doubt. The hybrid variants shine with more delicate washed / honey process beans and this option is why I personally favor the switch over the clever dripper.
CoffeeSoldier@sh.itjust.worksOPto Coffee@lemmy.world•New Hybrid Recipe for the Hario Switch - Ninth Circle!English1·10 days agoHey, thank you! Do you use a switch currently? If so do you have a favorite recipe for it?
CoffeeSoldier@sh.itjust.worksto Coffee@lemmy.world•Pour over: do you keep the kettle on the stove after pouring?English9·11 days agoTry it both ways. Bet that you either won’t notice a difference or that you might slightly prefer leaving it off. Brewing at near boiling the entire brew might be tolerated by some pretty light roasts, but in general a little less extraction of the late grinds is typically preferable. It feels a bit less fussy to not have to keep popping it back on the stove too.
CoffeeSoldier@sh.itjust.worksOPto Coffee@lemmy.world•New Hybrid Recipe for the Hario Switch - Ninth Circle!English1·11 days agoI think there are minor differences in taste buds, but I don’t think it’s the main driver behind tasting subtly in coffee. Almost all of us spend years drinking coffee that tastes like “coffee” and that flavor profile by and large is from over-roasting and over extraction. Specialty coffee appreciation comes from attention more than biology. Part of tasting theses differences comes from wanting to. If you are perfectly happy with your coffee experience it’s going to be harder to consciously attend to nuance. If you are interested, I think an easy way to appreciate a well tuned brew is to order a light or medium roast pour over at a reputable Cafe, buy some of the beans you just tasted, and try to then replicate that cup at home. Unless you have an immense stroke of luck, it’s unlikely youll achieve the same notes you tasted with the professional brew. Whether or not you choose to chase that cup is up to you, but I’d wager you’d notice difference at least.
CoffeeSoldier@sh.itjust.worksOPto Coffee@lemmy.world•New Hybrid Recipe for the Hario Switch - Ninth Circle!English2·11 days agoOh nice catch. Fixed that!
CoffeeSoldier@sh.itjust.worksOPto Coffee@lemmy.world•New Hybrid Recipe for the Hario Switch - Ninth Circle!English1·11 days agoFigured that just kind of went without saying.
Give it a try!
I love that little stirrer. I worry about breaking it or losing it and hope there is a way to get a replacement should that ever happen!
CoffeeSoldier@sh.itjust.worksOPto Coffee@lemmy.world•New Hybrid Recipe for the Hario Switch - Ninth Circle!English1·11 days agoFrench Press - I do not think so. Aeropress is highly versatile and there are tons of recipes to try. I’ve had a harder time getting the consistency and gentler flavor profiles to shine with the aeropress as compared to the switch. If you are happy with the aeropress and are still having fun exploring it’s many different ways to brew, I think I’d probably keep exploring that before adding the switch to your arsenal. However, if you don’t already have a v60, the switch is neat because in addition to an immersion brewer you automatically then have what I think is one of the best conventional pour over brewers just by keeping the lever open.
CoffeeSoldier@sh.itjust.worksOPto Coffee@lemmy.world•New Hybrid Recipe for the Hario Switch - Ninth Circle!English4·11 days agoIn short yes. This is both the fun and frustration of specialty coffee. These details can make a difference and just when you get things all dialed in, you try different beans and you need to adjust things again. This recipe is pretty forgiving thanks the immersion component. It’s not meant to be intimidating, but all the details provide starting points. Different beans, different grinders, different water can all cause adjustments as can personal taste preferences. The end goal is always the perfect cup of coffee for any particular bean while also reminding oneself that “pretty damn close” is still a highly enjoyable experience.
The drip tray is Tritan, about as inert as plastic gets.
Pretty good chance these will cross the line between epic embarrassment and getting arrested for public indency if you slip your dad bod into these to Pick the girls up from school.