Coffee - Your Current Brew

Wow, awesome!

I think 202°F is a good temp to start with. If after trying that, it needs a boost in acidity/punch to make things more interesting, you can go up a few degrees. Sometimes light roast washed coffees even need 210°-212°F to extract well.

4 on the Ode 2 sounds pretty fine. Did you just get that grinder? Have you tried that grind level before?

High-grown African coffees usually produce a lot of fines, so normally need to be ground a bit coarser.

What volume of coffee are you brewing? Do you use a high or low agitation method?
Maybe I'll start at 5. I've had the grinder for a at least 4 months. I've been grinding between 4 and 6. My thinking was being that it's a very light roast, to grind finer to increase extraction.

For this I'll probably brew 20 grams with 320 ml for a 16:1 ratio and adjust from there. I probably use low agitation. I try not to pour from high up and l never stir or shake like some YouTube videos do.
 
Maybe I'll start at 5. I've had the grinder for a at least 4 months. I've been grinding between 4 and 6. My thinking was being that it's a very light roast, to grind finer to increase extraction.

For this I'll probably brew 20 grams with 320 ml for a 16:1 ratio and adjust from there. I probably use low agitation. I try not to pour from high up and l never stir or shake like some YouTube videos do.
For the past few months I've been using the James Hoffman 5-pour method, which is essentially 5 pours, which is quite a bit of agitation in itself, but not a lot of additional swirling or stirring, and grinding fine enough for around a 2:30 drawdown for 200-250mL brews. This works well for light roasts, especially when they're fresh, but it can also bring out harshness, especially once the coffee starts to age a bit.

In the last couple of days, I've been experimenting with grinding coarser and increasing agitation and pour rate, and pouring from higher up, and my brews have been better - Juicier, with much less, or even zero astringent, acrid, harsh flavors.

When I say juicy, that's how our brains interpret that perceived sweetness (there's no sugar in a brewed black coffee) combined with the acidity that exists in a quality, light to medium roasted coffee.

There are so many variables you can adjust with a pourover. That's what's so fun to me about it. I'll experiment with each bag of coffee I get, changing up brew temp, grind size, number of pours, amount of agitation, etc.

It's just helpful to change one variable at a time, as with experimentation of any kind, in order to be able to isolate and discover what impact these individual changes have, on the final cup.

Keep in mind that some agitation, whether swirling (what I do) or stirring, will be needed when making the grind size coarser, in order to slow drawdown (agitation causes migration of fine particles into the micropores of the filter, clogging it and slowing the drawdown).
 
For the past few months I've been using the James Hoffman 5-pour method, which is essentially 5 pours, which is quite a bit of agitation in itself, but not a lot of additional swirling or stirring, and grinding fine enough for around a 2:30 drawdown for 200-250mL brews. This works well for light roasts, especially when they're fresh, but it can also bring out harshness, especially once the coffee starts to age a bit.

In the last couple of days, I've been experimenting with grinding coarser and increasing agitation and pour rate, and pouring from higher up, and my brews have been better - Juicier, with much less, or even zero astringent, acrid, harsh flavors.

When I say juicy, that's how our brains interpret that perceived sweetness (there's no sugar in a brewed black coffee) combined with the acidity that exists in a quality, light to medium roasted coffee.

There are so many variables you can adjust with a pourover. That's what's so fun to me about it. I'll experiment with each bag of coffee I get, changing up brew temp, grind size, number of pours, amount of agitation, etc.

It's just helpful to change one variable at a time, as with experimentation of any kind, in order to be able to isolate and discover what impact these individual changes have, on the final cup.

Keep in mind that some agitation, whether swirling (what I do) or stirring, will be needed when making the grind size coarser, in order to slow drawdown (agitation causes migration of fine particles into the micropores of the filter, clogging it and slowing the drawdown).

I'll try the JH 5 pour method with this bag.

I had my first cup this morning and it tasted surprisingly good. I was afraid of it being sour from under extraction.

I took your advice and grinded at 5 instead of 4 and used 20 grams with 320ml at 205F with coffee Chronicles Hario switch method. 160ml with valve open, added the other 160ml with valve closed and drained at 2:10.
 
For the past few months I've been using the James Hoffman 5-pour method, which is essentially 5 pours, which is quite a bit of agitation in itself, but not a lot of additional swirling or stirring, and grinding fine enough for around a 2:30 drawdown for 200-250mL brews. This works well for light roasts, especially when they're fresh, but it can also bring out harshness, especially once the coffee starts to age a bit.

In the last couple of days, I've been experimenting with grinding coarser and increasing agitation and pour rate, and pouring from higher up, and my brews have been better - Juicier, with much less, or even zero astringent, acrid, harsh flavors.

When I say juicy, that's how our brains interpret that perceived sweetness (there's no sugar in a brewed black coffee) combined with the acidity that exists in a quality, light to medium roasted coffee.

There are so many variables you can adjust with a pourover. That's what's so fun to me about it. I'll experiment with each bag of coffee I get, changing up brew temp, grind size, number of pours, amount of agitation, etc.

It's just helpful to change one variable at a time, as with experimentation of any kind, in order to be able to isolate and discover what impact these individual changes have, on the final cup.

Keep in mind that some agitation, whether swirling (what I do) or stirring, will be needed when making the grind size coarser, in order to slow drawdown (agitation causes migration of fine particles into the micropores of the filter, clogging it and slowing the drawdown).
I tried the JH 5 pour method this morning using same grind size and temperature. 15gr/240ml . Totally different (in a good way) taste using V60 instead of switch. I really wish l had the proper knowledge to describe it to you in coffee geek terminology, but l am not that far on the learning curve yet. I'm going to watch the YT video again today to make sure l am doing it right. Trying new brewing techniques keeps this hobby interesting.
 
Just arrived ... really looking forward to giving it a try. The grinder hopper will be empty in a couple-three days and then it'll be time for a morning cup.

Burundi.webp
 
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peets.webp

From the small farms of East Java, this silky roast has notes of teakwood and blood orange zest, chocolate and vanilla. Lovely afternoon cup, nice in the morning as well.
 
Past two days I enjoyed this. Brought my own coffeemaker to bed and breakfast. Brother and sister in law like Starbucks. Not this kid that stuff is 😝😝

IMG_5634.webp
 
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