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• #21552
Had a conversation with my good lady, she’s happy with either the gaggia classic pro or the lelit Anna
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• #21553
I'd definitely just see whats available second hand. Due to their simplicity and availability of parts. I'm not completely familiar with the differences between models (since last time I was tempted to buy one myself).
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• #21554
Happy Wednesday
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• #21555
I've been trying to tweak my camping coffee set-up and see if I can get it really really compact. Saw these and they look great in terms of compact-ness, but would I be right in assuming they're rubbish? Humour me - I'm a coffee dunce.
I've currently my kit down to a stainless pot thing that a gas canister and tiny stove can fit in, my mug which has a temperate strip on it so I check water temp, and then either an aero press or a plastic hario dripper. It's pretty compact and light with the Hario, but I assume one day I'll drag the hario out of a bag and it'll have cracked or something, thus rendering me coffee-less.
edit: sorry, that wasn't supposed to be a reply! Hope you avoided the famously cantankerous owner of FCP ;-D
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• #21556
Would an Aeropress Go and a small hand grinder be too much to carry? Makes a great cup!
Or a regular Aeropress with the grinder stashed inside it?
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• #21557
If I'm doing normal camping (as opposed to carrying stuff on a bike) then I take an aero press and tend to pre-grind beans at home (I don't have a hand-grinder). I'd like to see just how compact I can make my half-decent coffee kit for when I have limited space, though. I did like the idea of literally just having the one container of stuff, with everything fitting in to that.
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• #21558
Aeropress + Porlex is hard to beat if you want portable, freshly ground coffee.
If you want to go as minimal as possible, ground coffee + hot water into cup, leave for a few mins and scoop the grounds off the top & drink.
No idea on the usefulness of those folding V60-type things though.
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• #21559
Compact = cowboy coffee. It's surprisingly good.
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• #21560
I use a collapsable Sea to Summit dripper with V60 papers:
https://seatosummit.com/product/x-brew-coffee-dripper/
(with a Porlex mini)
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• #21561
It always impresses me how much people want good coffee in difficult circumstances. Aeropress on a flight? Checking water temp for a V60 while camping? Just have a cup of tea!
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• #21562
cup of tea
Anti thread >>>>>
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• #21563
I'd seen those Sea to Summit drippers - I'd heard the filter thing was a bit fiddly and kept popping out, but ditching it and using filters seems like a good idea
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• #21564
Looks ace, good call. On my list to buy now!
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• #21565
I have the square mile shop one, it is ok but not good on a windy day as too light.
My preferred is the Rivers micro dripper, but I may be swayed by the s2s one if I can get hold of one.
GSI java is good too, but messier to clean after and fiddly clips compared to the rivers dripper.
The advantage of brewing through a filter paper v60 style is it can then be used as a wrapper to easily clear up after into a carry out bag. Loose wet coffee grinds from other brewers are hard to rinse or transfer into a waste bag, especially if following leave no trace to the extreme on lightweight wild camping. Either that or I've failed to figure out something relatively simple as a solution and will be embarrassed when I learn what it is...
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• #21566
Aeropress on a flight just blew my mind.. I’ll defo be doing that if I ever travel again.
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• #21567
That's exactly why I use V60 papers, that and I much prefer the taste to the metal filter that the S2S comes with (and is an absolute pain in the arse to reseat when it comes out)
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• #21568
Cheers for this - some good info there. I might grab one of the square mile ones then. Yeah I agree with filter papers being less messy. An aeropress is fine if you can rinse it off easily, but that’s not always the case.
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• #21569
I've got a 250g bag of coffee beans, but don't have a grinder. What's the easiest way to get them ground so I can use them?
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• #21570
Ask your nearest friendly coffee shop to grind them for you
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• #21571
If you like coffee, buying a grinder is a great investment. Although if you want one for making espresso it can be a bit expensive.
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• #21572
Anyone had this stuff before? Just been given a bag randomly, but I’ve also just had another kilo of YB through the post (super speedy delivery as always @StevePeel !) so I don’t really want to open the Lavazza while I’ve got nice stuff to get through. Will it just be rank? I assume another few weeks in the bag won’t make much difference.
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• #21573
I just make black coffee with an aeropress. And I just buy Lavazza, (the red one) as it's easy. Would my coffee be any better with a grinder and beans?
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• #21574
It was probably roasted a year ago so I wouldn’t worry about it.
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• #21575
Yes.
That is dope - pedal powered grinder is a delightful touch!