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Glad to get that recc on a travel grinder - thanks RShep!
There's not a huge difference between the quality of coffee coming out of an aeropress and a french press. The aero allows a finer grind, and less sludge. On the other hand, the grinds in the bottom of a cup of french press are quite tasty... an aero basically *is* a 1-2 cup french press, but with a paper filter element instead of the screen.
K-cups aren’t just for camping. I have one in the house and love the ease of making coffee. The big downside is they only last a couple years. I usually will buy a new one each year for the house and then regulate the oldest ones to campers and the garage.
I am a huge coffee snob and even roast my own beans at home. But while camping I want easy and convenient. I use a “manual Keurig.” No mess, no fuss, just add boiling water, press the plunger and throw out the pod. It actually makes a decent cup if you select your pods carefully (single origin, no Doughnut Shop crappy blends, ha ha)
https://a.co/d/9UTzObd
That’s a nice piece of kitOn the subject of boiling water, I can’t recommend the STS Olicamp Pot highly enough, one of my favorite pieces of gear. Boils water twice as fast as a regular pot and the handles stay cool to the touch. Use it a lot. Pays for itself in propane savings.
Randy
https://a.co/d/eXTyfx2
Ya that looks handy.That’s a nice piece of kit
Thanks brother. Went ahead and ordered one!Kevin,
Don’t have a jet boil so not sure. Works perfectly on the CI stove, don’t see why it wouldn’t work on an open fire.
Randy
I also roast my own beans! I hear you on the simplicity part, and I’ve leaned that way in the past. The Keurig system, to me, commits me to too many coffee “sins.” I can count five right off the top of my head, and the manual version only corrects one of those (water temp).
I’ve gone back and forth over the years on various methods. For camping or Army field experiences, I have tried and given up on:
Making pre-ground coffee “satchels” like tea bags - poor extraction
Cowboy coffee - makes a decent cup but prone to a mouthful of grounds and a pain to clean up
French press - very good cup if executed well. I find that cleaning out the grounds is a pain when camping because the volume of running water I have access to is reduced and I’m trying to avoid too much paper towel trash. Also a little silty, but some people favor that mouthfeel.
Aeropress - I enjoyed the coffee I got out of an aeropress but I don’t care for making “americano-style” coffee from a concentrate. I find that loses a lot of the special nuances AP brings out - sweetness, silky texture, and bright acidity. Since I don’t care for the coffee-from-concentrate method, the AP is limited to a smaller cup and doesn’t scale up well to multiple cups. I used one off and on for years but finally took it to the thrift shop just a few months ago.
Instant Starbucks Via packets - the easiest and simple alternative to all of the above. But also not the greatest cup.
I have not tried a mokka pot, and we usually camp away from shore power so anything that plugs into 120v power is off the table.
After all that I’ve finally settled on exactly the same thing I do at home / office for the majority of my Army and camping coffee: manual pour over brewing. I’ve got the equipment pretty well figured out and can make a single cup or 3 cups pretty quickly. It’s consistent, it’s super high quality, and it makes every day better. I also like that cleanup is dead simple because the grounds are contained within the filter, just like an auto-drip machine’s cleanup.
The Kit:
- Goose neck pour over kettle
- Thermal carafe for making multiple cups
- micro scale for weighing beans and water to the tenth of a gram
- hario v60 metal filter cone
- hario v60 02 filters
- hario slim stick manual ceramic burr grinder
And the over the top winning item is:
- a hario battery operated USB rechargeable motor attachment that fits onto the grinder
I also bring a JetBoil under the galley storage bins (and when doing Army stuff) to provide the hot water in the event the cast iron stove top isn’t free. That could be when breakfast is occupying both burners or when we pull over for a roadside barista cup mid-drive.
This setup all fits within one section of one of the CI Galley bin trays with the exception of the beans/goose neck/carafe. The carafe and beans ride up in the galley upper storage shelf and the gooseneck kettle rides inside the sink when traveling. With this setup, I can adhere to all the Laws of Coffee with no compromise.
The Laws of Coffee (breaking these amounts to Sins against Coffee in my book)
- water temp
- dosage
- extraction time
- roast freshness
- storage
- grind freshness
- grind quality / consistency
Hmmm. Thank you sensei.
Been paying very close attention to this coffee mentorship in CampInns, and now resonating esp to the ease of cleanup on pour over.
In years of backpacking, car camping, tent trailering I have about got the French Press by manual grind down, and the time to grind just right...("Its all about the grind, Sarnt"~Jonesy, in Blackhawk Down)
My monkey on the grind ending time now just matches time to boil on the stove...old fashioned one pot to do it all-
And I find the jet boil is wayyy too fast; that it interrupts my morning zen monkey meditation..which of course disturbs the exquisite timing needed to heat/cool to just right temp to add the ground beans...
But yeah, the heck with that mystical mumbo jumbo;
Just saving wasting CI tank water rinsing or saving cleanup wasting paper towels to get messy grounds out of the stainless German made french press
(That I bot on your mention here, iirc)
Fulfills my KonMar ethic...less is more, simplify...
Gonna have to think on this pour over gear. Haro is the bomb ya say, US Army field tested...good enuff for gubmint work, good enough for me...
I still have my old USN cup from the mess- as the Old Chief teaches the newbies - you rinse but never wash it out completely...building and that heat tempered dark varnish like coating is crucial.
USB grinder? Wait! Isnt that sacriligious?
That might open a dark worm hole to another parallel universe. I'll need MOAH POWAH!
Agghh, bigger newer sogen!
PS: have we done the
"how to roast your own beans from green"
using a lodge cast iron covered skillet on CI stove, yet?
I use the Behmoor 2000 roaster in my garage. A great personal use roaster for up to a pound of beans per roast. Has smoke suppression but not recommended for in the house. Joe Behmoor, the inventor, provides great CampInn level customer service.
Behmor 2000AB Plus Home Coffee Roaster