Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Making coffee with a French press

Bodum French Press
While I am sipping a hot fresh cup of coffee from my french press I realize that most folks don't know how to make coffee in one, nor have they tasted the wonderful coffee they make.
Why should I give up my drip coffee maker you say? Well, for one, it is generally wasteful and good coffee isn't cheap, and two, it just doesn't get hot enough to unlock the oil from the beans and give your coffee that great flavor it should have. Also, a french press is cheap, easily replaced, cleaned and doesn't require a filter. After I started using a press, I gave my $150 Krups drip coffee maker to my mother and I do not miss it.

Here are the instructions for making coffee in a french press.

1. Grind some fresh coffee from medium coarse to coarse. Don't make it too fine or it'll be hard to press and you'll get the fine grounds in your cup. Also, use a burr grinder with a good consistency for grinding. I use a Cuisinart. It isn't very expensive but it works. I sometimes use my Rancilio Rocky grinder, but that is a bit overkill and I don't like moving my settings away for my espresso, changing coffee and changing over from espresso grinds to coffee grinds, etc.
2. Depending on the size of french press. The standard one should take about 4 tablespoond of coffee in the carafe.
3. Pour boiling water over the grinds. My belief is that this is the secret to the best cup of coffee. A drip machine never gets close enough to boiling, nor does it swirl the grounds around like the press.
4. Place the top on the press and there are two ways to do this part.
    a. Wait about 5 minutes then slowly push the handle down
    b. go ahead and very slowly push he handle down.
It really doesn't matter, since the effect is the same.
The pressing pushes all the grounds together and to the bottom of the glass carafe.

Now pour yourself a cup of coffee and enjoy. Savor the difference in the taste. Notice how much richer and bolder the taste is when compared to the bitter, shallow taste of a drip maker. If I am going to make coffee, I either do it this way or I make a Cafe Americano with espresso and boiling water. The espresso takes the quality up another notch, but not everyone can afford an espresso machine, but for around $15, everyone can afford a french press. I think everyone on my Christmas list is getting a french press this year.

Cafe Americano and Caramel Macchiato

In case you didn't know it, a cafe americano is merely a coffee. I make mine with a double espresso shot and about 8 ounces of hot water. It's pretty stout, but I like it with cream and splenda. It's gooooooddd!!!

My Caramel Macchiato is pretty simple, better than Starbucks and it is sugar free. I make it just like you would a latte really, but I add some sugar free caramel creamer to the milk foam, splenda as well. I top it with Turbinado sugar and some sugar free caramel. It is delicious.

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Making Espresso

Here are my Espresso making methods. If you have questions or suggestions for improvement, please comment. These instructions should work for just about any espresso machine. These instructions generally assume a semi-automatic machine. That is a machine with a pump and thermostat.


1. TEMPERATURE - Let the machine heat for at least 30 min to 1 hour with portafilter attached. You want every part of the machine very hot.

2. GRIND & DOSE - Put some beans (Mocha Java from Whole Foods in my case) in the grinder and grind at a setting of 10 into the portafilter (this will be different for different roasts. You just have to experiment with the grid settings before you get the one that works best.)
Fill the portafilter above the top a little. I used to measure with a gram scale, but after time I got to where I was good enough to see and feel how much of a dose was enough. I used a ridgeless filter basket. The ridge on the baskets that ship with most machines just gets in the way. Always put just the amount of beans into the grinder for the task at hand and once you start this process, you cannot stop. It only takes a few minutes for those precious grinds to lose the oil. moisture and aroma in the open air.

3. TAMP - Level the grinds off with your finger and be careful not to pack the grounds in any way. You want your dose to be consistent.
Use a tamper and apply 30 pounds of pressure and turn and then spin lightly to polish the top. After this, I take a give it a gentle blow to remove the excess coffee from the rim and the top of the cake.

Put the portafilter into the machine and lock it around tight enough for a seal, but not too tight. You'll get the hang of this. If you see what coming our around the sides when you make your espresso, then are not tight enough. Too tight and you will ruin the seal gasket underneath and will have to replace it.

4. TEMPERATURE - I make sure that my temperature is 218, before I hit the switch to pull the shot. It should already be there since, the machine has been warming for almost an hour. In reality, it only takes a few minutes for the temp to reach 218, but it takes 30 minutes or more for the entire machine to heat up since it is almost entirely stainless steel and believe me, you want it hot. I often hit the switch just before I take the portafilter out and let hot water run through the portfilter. This heats up the group head and the portafilter even more. I then switch off, remove the portafilter and dry it quickly before I grind. The temp will come back up before you are ready for your shot, unless you ran out a lot of water. (Make sure the glass that will be receiving the espresso is also hot.)

5. EXTRACTION - Hit the pump button and the espresso should flow in a few seconds, you should see tiger striping since the crema and coffee are coming out together into your espresso cup. Depending on what your portafilter is, you will have different cups.


A. Single Shot = 1 shot Glass
B. Double Shot = 2 Shot Glasses
C. Double Shot with naked portafilter = 1 Espresso Cup Glass
D. Triple Shot with nake portafilter = 1 Espresso Cup

The Golden Rule
Double shot = 2 to 2.5 ounces in 20 to 25 seconds

Let the Espresso flow. If your making a double shot, you should almost fill the two shot glasses in around 25 seconds. If it comes out in less than 15 seconds, then you need to tamp harder or grind finer so that the water has to fight it's way through the grounds. If it comes out greater than 25 seconds and the machine is struggling, your grind may be too fine or the tamp too hard. This part is all experimentation, since all coffees are different. I went through about 5 or 6 different kinds of coffee before I settled on Mocha Java from Whole Foods. What also works well is Illy Espresso grinds in the can. It is not as good as a fresh grind, but it is the best you will get in a pre-ground format.

After the espresso has poured, you should see the thick crema on the top and it should look very golden with maybe some striping in it. The espresso should be consumed immediately because if it sits for too long, the oils evaporate and it will be bitter.

The crema should be a golden brown tan and the crema itself should be thick, about 1/3 of the espresso cup. If you have tiger striping on the top of the crema, then you should have a perfect shot. If you have the perfect crema, it will follow that your espresso will taste perfect, but it is not always the case. The quality of your coffee can also dictate the taste as well. Sometimes you can do everything right and the coffee just tastes bitter.

Another problem you may run into is you feel like you are doing everything right and the crema is thin or nonexistent. This is a good sign of a poor choice in beans or the beans are too old. You want beans that are freshly roasted within about 5 days. Ideally the beans should be roasted between 3 - 10 day for making the espresso. This is the butter zone. Too young or too old is very bad for a decent tasting espresso.

If you drink espresso straight, then enjoy. It should taste creamy and almost sweet. If it is bitter, then some part of the process has gone awry, probably extraction was too long. I mix in a little flavored cream and splenda into mine sometimes for something different. I frequently pull a double and then just drink that as a pick me up. I will pull a triple shot and mix it with boiling water to create Cafe Americano (Coffee). I'll make a Flavored Latte or Cappucino by using the milk frother on the Rancilio to create the appropriate mixture of steam and frothed milk.

Monday, July 13, 2009

Espresso...one year later


It has almost been a year since I bought my espresso machine and I wanted to share the things I have learned. Before I bought my Rancilio Silvia, I had never made a decent espresso in my life. Last year I wanted a machine, so I trolled the Internet looking for the right one to buy and believe me there were many choices, but I decided on the Rancilio because so many people recommended it and there wasn't a single negative comment that I could find out there.
I bought it off Ebay and I cheated a little bit because I bought one with a controller so that I could set the temperature and see what the current temperature is. The Rancilio Silvia is easy to modify, so many dealers do these mods themselves and sell the machine at a higher cost to turn a profit and get an edge in a market that is flooded with retailers.
Without the PID controller on my Rancilio, it would have required a lot of experimentation with timing the shot that it does with it. I also bought the Rancilio Rocky grinder in the deal as well because I knew one thing, to make espresso, you need the ability to fine tune the grind.
When I first got it, I probably made 5 or 6 shots before I "sort of" got the hang of it. Here is my process.

1. Let the machine heat for at least 30 min to 1 hour with portafilter attached.
2. Put some beans (Mocha Java from Whole Foods) in the grinder and grind at a setting of 10 into the portafilter, let it come above the rim of the portafilter a little. I used to measure with a gram scale, but after time I got to where I was good enough to see and feel how much of a dose was enough.
3. Level the grinds off with your finger and be careful not to pack the grounds.
4. Use a tamper and apply 30 pounds of pressure and turn and then spin lightly. After this, I take a give it a gentle blow to remove the excess coffee from the rim and the top of the cake.
5. Put the portafilter in and lock it around tight enough for a seal, but not too tight. You'll get the hang of this. If you see what coming our around the sides when you make your espresso, then are not tight enough. Too tight and you will ruin the seal gasket underneath and will have to replace it.
I make sure that my temperature is 218, before I hit the switch to pull the shot. It should already be there since, the machine has been warming for almost an hour. In reality, it only takes a few minutes for the temp to reach 218, but it takes 30 minutes or more for the entire machine to heat up since it is almost entirely stainless steel and believe me, you want it hot. I often hit the switch just before I take the portafilter out and let hot water run through the portfilter. This heats up the group head and the portafilter even more. I then switch off, remove the portafilter and dry it quickly before I grind. The temp will come back up before you are ready for your shot, unless you ran out a lot of water. (Make sure the glass that will be receiving the espresso is also hot.)
6. Hit the pump button and the espresso should flow in a few seconds, you should see tiger striping since the crema and coffee are coming out together into your espresso cup. Depending on what your portafilter is, you will have different cups.
A. Single Shot = 1 shot Glass
B. Double Shot = 2 Shot Glasses
C. Double Shot with naked portafilter = 1 Espresso Cup Glass
D. Triple Shot with nake portafilter = 1 Espresso Cup
7. Let the Espresso flow. If your making a double shot, you should almost fill the two shot glasses in around 25 seconds. If it comes out in less than 15 seconds, then you need to tamp harder or grind finer so that the water has to fight it's way through the grounds. If it comes out greater than 25 seconds and the machine is struggling, your grind may be too fine or the tamp too hard. This part is all experimentation, since all coffees are different. I went through about 5 or 6 different kinds of coffee before I settled on Mocha Java from Whole Foods. What also works well is Illy Espresso grinds in the can. It is not as good as a fresh grind, but it is the best you will get in a pre-ground format.

After the espresso has poured, you should see the thick crema on the top and it should look very golden with maybe some striping in it. The espresso should be consumed immediately. If you drink espresso straight, then enjoy. It should taste creamy and almost sweet. If it is bitter, then some part of the process has gone awry, probably extraction was too long. I mix in a little flavored cream and splenda into mine sometimes for something different. I frequently pull a double and then just drink that as a pick me up. I will pull a triple shot and mix it with boiling water to create Cafe Americano (Coffee). I'll make a Flavored Latte or Cappucino by using the milk frother on the Rancilio to create the appropriate mixture of steam and frothed milk.

Frothing milk is just as hard as making the espresso. You have to use a Frothing pitcher and a thermometer. On the Rancilio, I hit the Frothing button just as I finish pulling a shot. When the temp gets to 275, I put the wand into the milk and begin frothing. If you want a Latte, you'll froth the milk just below the surface, letting the milk circulate against the bottom of the pictcher until the milk reaches 145 degrees. Do not exceed 145 or your milk will taste burned. Don't let the wand come to the surface of the milk or you'll get very large bubbles. You want a pitcher full of micro bubbles. It takes practice. After you are done, put your hot espresso in a glass, add the milk slowly and if your really talented, decorate your latte with the last milk that comes out of the pitcher. A latte is 3 parts steamed milk and 1 part frothed milk technically, but it works best if you just have all four parts a fine microbubbled milk mixture. Bingo, you have a Cafe Latte.

If you want a cappucino, then all you have to do is bring your wand up a litter further when frothing to create a milk foam and you then use a spatula to hold back the foam when pouring. A Cappuccino is equal parts steamed and frothed milk, so the last part if to empty the foam into the drink.

Here are some tips for frothing milk:

1. Before your start your shot, pour your milk into the frothing picture and place it in the freezer. Ice cold milk froths easier since it has more time to froth before the temp can reach 145. The finished product after frothing should have an almost sweet taste to it.
2. Use the milk that suits your tastes, I use fat free to cut back on fat, but 2% is the best milk to froth. It has the right proportions of fat.
3. Whatever technique you use while frothing, the most important part if that the milk circulate around in the pitcher.
4. Don't try frothing a lot of milk at one time. 4-6 of ounces milk is plenty.

I told someone a while back that making good espresso takes hundreds of shots and lot of practice and they laughed and responded, "All that for a cup of coffee?". I replied, "Yes, an espresso done right will ruin you for any coffee you can buy in any store, cafe of fast food outlet."
I won't beat up Starbucks too much, but some of the worst espresso I made in the beginning, was better than the best day at Starbucks. Starbucks has many problems, but the simple fact is that they cover up the flawed espresso shots with the milk and flavors. My wife and I have been to Starbucks maybe 3 times in the past year and before I bought my espresso machine, we went 2 times a week. After I started making my own, I could no longer tolerate the taste of Starbucks. The truth is, I also have saved enough money that my espresso machine is paid for.
Ok enough about Starbucks. I plan to buy a new espresso machine soon. I want a machine that is more manual so I can control the pull of the shot. I want to learn to make espresso like the old Italian Baristas do. Matter of fact, when I ever get to travel to Italy, I am going to try to spend one day with a true barista.
I hope someone else can benefit from my year of Espresso because I have learned a lot and I enjoy every minute of it and so does my wife.

Saturday, July 11, 2009

My first Espresso Shots. One Year ago

I've learned a lot since I did these. I'll have to post a newer video soon.









Here we go

I decided to create a blog where I can share my thoughts about the glorious coffee bean. I'm hoping that by doing this, I can get more people in America interested in making drinks with espresso. I've been extremely happy with my espresso machine since I purchased one and I have almost used it every day. Check back often or follow me on Twitter to see what I am up to.