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French coffee press?
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Casa Vitus is without a good coffee machine. Our current brewer is exhausted after 9+ years of good and noble service.

My wife says she's thinking about a "French coffee press" to replace it. What the heck is that? And patriotic considerations aside, does anyone have a recommendation for a good one? (My wife wanted me to ask you to recommend an inexpensive one, but I assured her that the Slowtwitch forum does not do "inexpensive.")

Thanks!








"People think it must be fun to be a super genius, but they don't realize how hard it is to put up with all the idiots in the world."
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Re: French coffee press? [vitus979] [ In reply to ]
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While I cannot recommend a good French Press, I have to say that this post succinctly captures the very reasons I love this forum:

1) we love coffee

2) we hate the French (in a fun-loving way Francois)

3) we love expensive stuff, when inexpensive stuff would get the job done just as well.

Rock on.
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Re: French coffee press? [vitus979] [ In reply to ]
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The "French Press" style coffee maker also goes by the name "press pot", and by the common name Bodum - which is itself a brand name (kind of like kleenex or xerox). They are as a general rule fairly inexpensive, and very simple both in terms of operation as well as construction. It is also one of the best ways to make a cup of coffee. While the press pot itself should be easy to find (hell even starbucks carries them), to acheive coffee excellence you will also require a high quality grinder. This is where it can get expensive. You want large, uniform chunks which you will not get from a cheap grinder. Skimp on the grinder and you may be unimpressed with your press pot. With a good grinder however, you will be hard pressed (no pun intended) to find a better cup.

A couple of links to get you started:

http://www.ineedcoffee.com/99/05/frenchpress/
http://www.coffeegeek.com/guides/presspot


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Re: French coffee press? [vitus979] [ In reply to ]
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Call it a "freedom" press.

I love it, I like my coffee strong enough that I whistle and it comes over. You pour hot water into the press (whick looks like a very small pitcher) and put in the cofee grounds. Stir and let it sit for as long as you want. After 10-15' it won't get any stronger. You then push a metal "filter" down the pitcher. The filter keeps the grounds at the bottom so that you can pour out the coffee. The downside is that you will have a little sediment at the bottom of your coffee cup. just don't drink that last little sip.

Get any of them you find at Target, WalMart, etc. It should cost anywhere from $10-$20 depending on how much chrome comes on it. They will all taste the same.
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Re: French coffee press? [vitus979] [ In reply to ]
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I understand they take a bit of practice to get the knack. I'm no big coffee drinker, but I do look fondly upon the French Press. It's just got the perfect combination of simplicity, sophistication, pretentiousness, and cool factor. Using one makes everyone in the room think you are a pompous ass and at the same time wish to God that they were you.
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Re: French coffee press? [Pooks] [ In reply to ]
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Using one makes everyone in the room think you are a pompous ass and at the same time wish to God that they were you.

I'm fairly confident I've already got the first part covered. . .

Thanks everyone for the help.








"People think it must be fun to be a super genius, but they don't realize how hard it is to put up with all the idiots in the world."
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Re: French coffee press? [vitus979] [ In reply to ]
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This is the prefered method these days. The metal strainer keeps the oils that a paper filter can take away. 5-6 minutes is the time you are looking for and mine (cheap Bodum $7.99) has no problem with espresso grind. Lance has been plugging Peete's coffee, find it on the web, and they have a great website for tips and product. I'm not a pro at this so if I'm making it wrong, I don't even know.
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Re: French coffee press? [vitus979] [ In reply to ]
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(My wife wanted me to ask you to recommend an inexpensive one, but I assured her that the Slowtwitch forum does not do "inexpensive.") reply

dude, that's hillarious and so true. well said!
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Re: French coffee press? [Khai] [ In reply to ]
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to acheive coffee excellence you will also require a high quality grinder.

Almost forgot to ask- can you recommend a good grinder?








"People think it must be fun to be a super genius, but they don't realize how hard it is to put up with all the idiots in the world."
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Re: French coffee press? [Khai] [ In reply to ]
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As Khai mentioned, a good grider is key to great french press coffee. Get a Burr Grinder which crushes the coffee beans into uniform size and doesn't heat up the grinds as a blade grinder can do. Not that expensive, may $20-$30 for a basic one.

Andrew
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Re: French coffee press? [vitus979] [ In reply to ]
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the only thing I would add to what everybody else has already stated is the manual aspect of press pots. We have two of them and love the quality of the coffee they produce compared to dip coffee pots. But they have yet to make a press pot you can setup with a timer that will have coffee already made as you stagger into the kitchen in the morning.

This has typically resulted in the "you get up and make coffee I did it yesterday" conversation with your significant other whilst your both still lying in bed.

We got a vacum brewer few years ago from bodum that gives you the taste and quality of a french press but the convience of a dip machine. Just watching it brew coffee is way cool, plus its has a great warmer function that doesn't cook the coffee. After 5 yrs of constant use, one of the seals is leaking and we are back to using our french press until we finally get off our ass and order the part.

http://www.bodumusa.com/...8P5XTG0X0G77D9UJ9DC7

you can also get a presses from the same site. Starbucks has completely eliminated their online sales dept. You can only get stuff at their stores now

all this typing about coffee... I needs me another cup.

Jim
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Re: French coffee press? [vitus979] [ In reply to ]
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French Press: Great for Sunday mornings. But for everyday use? I would rather not operate a grinder and French press every morning half asleep. But that's just me. I hate mornings.




==================================
but I can deal with the angels, cause it ain’t me they’re here to claim. it’s a good night for blowing ‘em off til some other day
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Re: French coffee press? [vitus979] [ In reply to ]
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And another thing, if you have kids or are prone to knocking stuff off the counter - search for an insulated stainless steel one. That way you won't break a few before you find an unbreakable one. And it will do a nice job of keeping the coffee hot if you don't intend to guzzle it all at once. I think ours is a Nissan, it was $22 a few years ago.

Andy Tetmeyer (I work at HED)

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Re: French coffee press? [andyt] [ In reply to ]
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Dang, I finally get to post on a topic I know something about. I'm a slow triathlete but I have been running restaurants, hotels, privete clubs for 25+ years. Dont aske me for training advice- but cooking is a different story!



French press = very good coffee. It's also simple and extremely to use. Only dis-advantage is that most of them don't keep coffee hot - so you'll have to either look for an insulated one (hard to find and costly) or invest a few $ in an insulated carafe. (USed to be called a Thermos!).

Burr grinder (mentioned above) is the only good kind. the cheap ones that work sort of like a food processor heat up the beans and don't give an even grind. I like the retro looking kitchen aid model I have, design from the 30's. Nice and noisy to annoy the family at 5am.. has a bunch of grind settings so you can experiment.



Last- buy coffee roasted locally, not weeks ago. Search out a place in your city that roasts on site. I like, when I can, to leave my money in my own community.



SP


don't just do something..... sit there
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Re: French coffee press? [vitus979] [ In reply to ]
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Vitus,

I love the french press but a bit of a pain for every day use. I use the retro Stainless Kitchen Aid brewer and Bur Grinder. I would buy a press now to use until you get tired of it and buy a brewer. It makes a great reserve unit or camping pot.

Send me your address (and real name) in a PM and I will send you some locally roasted Peat's Major Dickason's blend. The best coffee ever and I don't care that Lance drinks it. It's the least I could do after the sign you made for me at CDA.

Dave Hinds
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Re: French coffee press? [Hinds57] [ In reply to ]
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Thanks, Dave, that's most cool of you!








"People think it must be fun to be a super genius, but they don't realize how hard it is to put up with all the idiots in the world."
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Re: French coffee press? [sp in az] [ In reply to ]
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I agree with sp. mail order coffee is too old. you don't know when it was roasted or how long its been sitting around. cofe shouldn't be more than a week old when used, so find a competent local roaster. and a french press is great, but I can't do it all the time.
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Re: French coffee press? [vitus979] [ In reply to ]
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[reply]can you recommend a good grinder?[/reply]

If you're made of money, the Mazzer Mini is pretty much the best there is - but for nearly $400, you'd have to be a true coffee aficionado to even consider it.

On the "normal" side of the scale, a quick Froogle search shows me that there are several burr grinders to be had for under $50. Krups, Capresso, and DeLonghi all have some weight in the coffee world, although I must admit I've no experience with their grinders. Perhaps someone else here does?

http://froogle.google.com/froogle?q=burr+grinder+&btnG=Search+Froogle


<If you're gonna be dumb, you gotta be tough>
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Re: French coffee press? [rgr195] [ In reply to ]
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My wife and I have been considering the vacuum brewer. Saw it in some catalog. So, it's as good as they tout it to be?
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Re: French coffee press? [vitus979] [ In reply to ]
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<<Almost forgot to ask- can you recommend a good grinder?>>

Capresso burr grinder. Mine was $50.00 but still grinds like it was brand new.

www.capresso.com

www.lnt.com

HTH

Brett
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Re: French coffee press? [Ginsu Dave] [ In reply to ]
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Just go to www.coffeegeek.com. All the coffee knowledge you never wanted and then some.

Another example of the internet exposing an affinity group nobody knew they were a member of...


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Re: French coffee press? [Ginsu Dave] [ In reply to ]
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"My wife and I have been considering the vacuum brewer. Saw it in some catalog. So, it's as good as they tout it to be?"

I have a Hario vacuum brewer and love it. Not for everyday use (a lot of work) but I use on weekends. It's a little small but since I'm the only coffee drinker it works for me. You might consider the Cona in the larger size.

While I'm here I'll recommend the Maestro burr grinder.

michael
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Re: French coffee press? [sp in az] [ In reply to ]
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It seems that all or most of the burr grinders are designed to hold coffee for more than one use, but I assume that is bad. Do you dump the unground coffee out of the grinder each time you use it, or put the whole unit in the freezer?
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Re: French coffee press? [vitus979] [ In reply to ]
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Next to espresso I love french press the best. The cleaning is sometimes a pain. We have two. One is a double walled metal one that keeps the cofee hotter. Both are by Bodum, if I recall.

The best, fastest and and most durable coffee producing home coffee maker (other than expresso) is the BUNN. The coffee is never burned. $90. 10 cups in 3 1/2 minutes!!!! It holds the water at 190deg--the perfect brewing temp for drippers. When you add the water it displaces the hot water from the chamber (which holds 2 pots) so it pours quickly onto the grounds. This is the system that commercial restaurant drippers use--even the gourmet ones. they are reported to last a @#*# of a long time.

We've had vacuum, regular drip (even the expensive ones), etc. For speed, great coffee and easy use they are the best.

Now, if someone can recommend a good home espresso brewer that isn't too pricey, I'm all ears. (Or, is it eyes)

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Take everything I say with a grain of salt. I know nothing.
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