My wife is a coffee nut (or bean, if you prefer) of the highest order. And
I'm not much different. This means we're always experimenting with new methods
of brewing different varieties of coffee bean. In the space of the few years we
have been together, we have been through more coffee pots than Gza Gza Gabor has
been through husbands. We've tried: French Presses espresso and cappuccino
machines regular perculators filter machines coffee pots that defy description.
In fact, so many have vied for space on our crowded countertop that I'm
struggling to picture them all as I write. However, we may well have found the
ultimate coffee machine combination that meets both our needs. Finally.
The Mimalist's French Press Coffee Machine
I'm a cappuccino afficianodo, but my wife is more minimalist in her tastes, and
prefers to hunker down with a smooth black brew. Although it wasn't long ago I
remember her sipping Vienna Mélange, heavy on the chocolate, since she started
design school she has streamlined her habits. Now she employs a one-cup Bodum
French press. This produces coffee of industrial strength with a caffeine
content high enough to revive a dead donkey. It also looks great on the counter
top, and its diminutive size leaves plenty of space for our other current coffee
brewing experiments. The size has another advantage. French press coffee
machines aren't partcularly good at keeping the coffee warm for very long. In
fact, after ten minutes, it's already verging on the undrinkable, so having a
coffee machine that only makes enough coffee for one cup means you get a
great-tasting optimal cup of coffee every time. It is, however, fiddly to clean,
and my wife is not one to encumber her life with meagre cleaning tasks before
whizzing out of the door to work every morning. I, on the other hand, work from
home. I get to poke that French press mesh with my washing up brush a little
more often than I would choose to in a perfect world.
The Grinder/Coffee Pot Combo
We went through a phase of trying out grinder/brewer combos. This was largely my
fault as I'm a stickler for grinding my own coffee beans so they are fresh for
each brew. While the coffee pots functioned as they should, I was never really
100% satisfied with the grinder elements. They didn't allow enough control over
how fine or grainy the beans could be ground, they warmed the beans - especially
if I was preparing coffee for a lot of people - and they tended to be very
noisy. Stand-alone grinders win hands down every time.
Pleasing All the People All of the Time - at least at Home.
At the moment we have returned to using a stand-alone coffee grinder that suits
both our requirements. My wife uses her Bodum French press with a course-
grained bean, and I am fortunate to have a Gaggia coffee machine that takes a
finer grained bean, makes all the right noises, fills the kitchen with the
finest aroma known to man and makes the milk foamy and stiff, just right for the
perfect capuccino. And I can always re-steam the milk if I want another cup
later on, so there's no danger of leaving the coffee on a hotplate and burning
it, which is handy because contrary to my wife I believe that one cup is never
enough.
Eoin Beckett is a freelance writer and editor. He writes both short fiction
and non-fiction for both online and print publications. Although he stems from
Ireland, he currently lives and works in Copenhagen, Denmark.
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