I have found that coffee is just as much a ritual as it is a beverage. Everyone has their own ritual, tailored to them, and to do so differently is contrary to their nature. My mother gets angry when people use her espresso machine wrong, in violation of her preferences. My father refuses to drink coffee if it isn't the perfect blend between espresso and cocao powder. My brother requires mint syrup to enjoy his coffee. Personally, I need to use my own pot, my own mug, and my own grounds. To do so any differently would be contrary to my nature; it would hurt, it would cause psychological resistence. I can't control it. It's the way I am. I have found that there are components to my ritual that make my coffee taste better.

Find a sacred mug. I cannot stress this enough. A mug that really defines you, tells everyone who you truly are. Perhaps it is the poster the from your favorite movie, or art of a video game character. Or maybe it has your favorite animal on it; are you fond of goldfinches, or perhaps koi? Maybe it's the logo of your preferred discipline of magick (java, python, etc), or a favorite novel (Lord of the Rings?). I have spent hours looking for the perfect mug. Scouring Etsy, Redbubble, Ebay, Amazon. "How will I know if I've found the right mug?" you may ask me -- to which I would respond: you will know. The mug will call out to you, seductive like a siren song, and deep in your spirit you will know that the mug is perfect. This is the most important part of coffee for me. If I don't have my favorite mug I won't even drink it. The coffee remains unchanged, but it's not the same. 

Find the perfect pot. Some people might think that the grind and roast you purchase are the two most important factors; I would disagree. I have had drip coffee, espresso coffee, and percolated coffee. Even if the grind is the same -- the coffee came from the same bag -- the essence, the the flavor of the coffee is different. It's not the same. It doesn't taste the same. It doesn't have the same texture, the same aftertaste. If you hate every coffee you've had from your pot, try a different kind of pot: if you always use a drip pot, try a percolator or a french press. Another huge factor is the sound the pot makes. I know this seems unrelated to the coffee, but I am completely serious when I say this -- if the coffee makes a more pleasing sound when it is being brewed, it will taste better. It's the simple truth. Something about the sound of a percolator makes my coffee taste better. My parents dont want me touching their percolators so I have been forced to endure the sound of a drip pot -- but I've grown fond of the hiss of my new coffee maker.

Use the same temperature/type of water every time. Temperature of water is a HUGE factor when making coffee. My coffee tastes radically different if I use hot water in my coffee machine. I personally find that I like my coffee most if I use refrigerated water. The refrigerator I have dispenses water, refrigerated water, nice and cold. Additionally, the type of water is a HUGE factor. My house has well-water, and it's not safe to drink in large quantities for an extended period of time, so we have a distiller in the basement that distills the wellwater and sends purified water to the gridge. My coffee tastes RADICALLY different when I use water from the tap, or water directly from the distiller. Something about the filter that the fridge water passes through, it perfects the water. The fridge water is holy, consecrated for the brewing ritual. It makes the coffee taste perfect.

Find the right roast. This is less important, because I have found many roasts that I like. Some, though, I detest. They all taste distinctly and radically different. If you hate coffee, there is a very good chance that you simply have not found a roast that you like. Some are salty, some are sour, some are more bitter, some are more burnt. My mother buys all these bourgeoisie espresso roasts, but I find that I prefer Folgers "Gentle on Your Stomach" coffee. It's bitter, it's strong, it's not at all sour. Even if I leave it in the pot overnight, it hardly turns sour at all -- though if I leave it out longer than overnight it does start to grow sour. It also depends on the temperature; colder coffee grows sour less quickly. Other coffees, sometimes after they sit out for a few hours they grow sour.

Find a coffee that smells perfect. This probably seems like an unrelated aspect to flavor, but smell contributes to taste. When I drink a coffee and it smells awful, I enjoy the flavor less, even if it tastes differently than it smells. If you like the smell of french vanilla, try some french-vanilla flavored coffee. It might not even taste like french vanilla -- it might taste just like regular cofee, but the smell with make you think it tastes like french vanilla. It's a weird psychological mind-game you play on yourself. The coffee I use, it smells wonderful. It's strong, it's bitter, it doesn't smell sweet or savory. I think everyone should find this for themselves.


My favorite mug broke today. I spent two hours looking for a new one online, and discovered that Vistaprint (you know, the business card company?) will let you design your own mug, with text, images, etc. for less than $20. You can either have art that wraps all the way around the mug, or an image (the same or different) on both sides. I painstakingly designed two designs for the mug. One of them has the Wordstar 4.0 logo on it, and the other has the Super Metroid box art. $50 for them both, including shipping. In 9 days I will have my next check, and I will buy myself those two mugs. I won't be able to enjoy my coffee until then. Coffee tastes better out of a good mug. But I will make do.

..and without taking anything away!


" …it’s inevitable that ground coffee will lose some of its flavor over time…"
CoffeePlusThree


As a lover of coffee for itself, I consider the title a poor one, if not actually disingenuous. What does one add to coffee to make it taste better? Well that depends on what your expectations of "coffee" are in the first place, and that is highly subjective. Some add milk, some sugar, others flavoured syrups, olive oil, macha, and doubtless some even more bizarre and esoteric ingredients. After a while though, it stops being coffee. Passalidae and I differ quite a bit on what we individually want from our coffee. He wants, nay demands a coffee that is a classically darkly-roasted, strong and intense bitter-flavoured coffee, exactly the profile I seek to avoid; the sort I had during a recent hospital stay, a high price to pay for poor coffee. Additionally, I want to taste the character of the original beans, I want something additional to gas-station or even cafe batch-brewed coffee. I want each cup to stand on its own; not every cup will be "perfect", whatever that means, but it will be tasty, satisfying and characterful.

This is true for each of us, we all want our coffee to do something unique for us, all have differing expectations. He and I have discussed this at length over some time and I've no doubt that were I to discuss coffee with each of you, we would find differences in what we want out of our cup. But whatever our individual taste, there are nevertheless things we ca ad should add to our coffee to improve it. I'm not talking about physical addition, rather time, care and technique. The problem that I see is that for the way a lot of people make coffee, they have already taken something out of their coffee, often without realising it.

Making the effort

Coffee is complicated, the raw coffee beans need to be grown, picked and processed, shipped to roasters, packaged and delivered to the enduser. Some of these processes add something to the coffee, others subtract from it. The user grinds the beans, uses some method to add hot water, and drinks. I've talked in the past about some species and types of coffee. Most coffee bought by major buyers is not the best; they buy cheap Coffea robusta coffees, grown at low altitudes and known for its bitterness and high caffeine content. Specialty coffee buyers are generally buying coffea arabica, grown at higher altitudes and generally known for lower bitterness and caffeine, but also for having better more interesting flavour profiles. I admit that I am on a mission to raise awareness of better coffee flavour, something that has been a part of my personal coffee journey, so I generally choose quality, high-altitude whole beans. Without adding anything, already I have a better cup of coffee. The only thing I add is a grinder, grinding just before I make my coffee, and avoiding the loss of flavour and the staling that occurs in preground coffees. From there it ws a short hop to finding a brewing method that works for me. In my case, the Moka pot as I love the strong and rich coffee it makes, almost espresso in style and suitable for making espresso-y milk drinks at home.

So here's where I take issue with OP, who is writing from a purely personal standpoint, and from his taste perspective alone. He likes different things in his coffee, bitterness and dark strength, elements that I (along with most coffee snobs) wish to eliminate in pursuit of subtle flavours. Follow him if you like that style of coffee by all means, but you will not get the most from even a cheaper coffee. I'm not arguing on the matter of taste, but much of what he says only applies if you like one, gas-station or hospital style of coffee.

There are things he says that I can agree with. Many things affect how we perceive flavours, so yes, picking the right mug can go some a\way to help, but it will not turn basically bad coffee into good. But buying good freshly roasted beans and grinding them yourself will. I can't stress enough how importsnt this is. You'll need to find a brewing method that works for you. I picked the Moka as I love the ritual, others like a French press (aka press pot) or will use filters to make a pourover. I lack the patience for that method, but admit that it can make a excellent brew if one takes care. Buying a coffee that smells good, check.

On one point we do agree: find a coffee you like. Even the cheapest grocery store these days has a wide range of coffees at good price points, ad it's sure worth your while to try a few of those. Local cafes ad roasters also sell good coffee, go find one, talk to them and for goodness sake, try something new. And avoid pre-ground coffee no matter what. The number one way to improve your coffee is to buy whole beans and grind before making. the second is to try some beans you never ried before, eve if it's at a roast level you'd normally avoid. I'm currently loving a dark-roast decaf that someone kindly bought me, and I'd normally avoid darker roasts like the plague.

I'm planning to do something on choosing coffee beans in the near future, in the hope of persuading folk to try something other and explore the diverse world of coffees. Watch this space.

This is far from an attack on how someone likes coffee; taste is very personal and a chacun son gout. But if you, like passalidae, are deeply unhappy with your coffee, it's time for you to get adventurous, change things up. It's unworthy to fight over personal taste, I'm just trying to help everyone to up their game and enjoy a different world of coffee. Goodness knows, I also seek to avoid overly sour coffee, and would love to know where passalidae got their salty coffee from so I can avoid it. In my world, salt is only ever added to reduce bitterness.






$ xclip -o | wc -w
1005

Log in or register to write something here or to contact authors.