ハリオV60 抽出レシピ How to brew with Hario V60 recipe by Kurasu Kyoto

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  • čas přidán 30. 07. 2024
  • Kurasuの日本国内チャンネルが移動となりました。是非こちらからフォローください!
    / @kurasukigu
    Kurasuのカフェで使用しているハリオV60の抽出レシピです!
    一度コツをつかめば簡単。
    是非おうち時間のドリップコーヒーにご活用ください。
    コーヒー:13g
    お湯:200g
    90c~91c
    30gのお湯
    30秒蒸らし
    100gまでお湯
    60秒立ったら
    200gまでお湯
    Hario V60 brewing is not as hard as you think.
    Here's a simple recipe of how we do it in our cafes at Kurasu.
    Coffee: 13g
    Water: 200g
    90c ~91c (194F)
    30g water
    30sec bloom
    Pour up to 100g
    60 sec
    Pour up to 200g
    Dripper: Kurasu Custom Colored Hario V60 Black Dripper
    kurasu.kyoto/products/ceramic...
    Kettle: Kinto Pour Over Kettle
    kurasu.kyoto/products/kinto-p...
    Server: Torch Coffee Server Pitchii
    kurasu.kyoto/products/coffee-...
    Grinder: Hario Coffee Mill Smart G
    kurasu.kyoto/products/hario-c...
    Hario Mobile Mobile Mill STICK
    kurasu.kyoto/products/hario-m...
    ドリッパー: KurasuオリジナルブラックHario V60ドリッパー
    jp.kurasu.kyoto/collections/ド...
    ケトル: KINTO (キントー)プアオーバーケトル
    jp.kurasu.kyoto/collections/%...
    サーバー:TORCH (トーチ)コーヒーサーバー ピッチ―
    jp.kurasu.kyoto/collections/サ...
    グライダー:ハリオ コーヒーミル・スマートG
    jp.kurasu.kyoto/collections/g...
    ハリオ モバイルミル スティック
    jp.kurasu.kyoto/collections/g...
    Kurasuの名前は日本語の「暮らす」からきています。はじめはオーストラリアのシドニーにて、日本の暮らしの中にあるデザイン性の高い雑貨を販売するオンラインショップとしてスタートしました。現在は日本のコーヒー器具を販売するストア、そして日本全国のスペシャルティコーヒーロースターと提携したコーヒー豆の定期購買サービスが、世界中のお客様にご支持をいただいています。
    二〇一六年には初のカフェ店舗として京都店、二〇一七年にシンガポール店、二〇一八年に京都、伏見稲荷に初のロースタリーをオープンした後、同年バンコク店もスタートしました。
    日本全国、また世界中のコーヒーロースターと密な連携をとることで常に最新のスペシャルティコーヒーに関わる情報交換をし、進化する焙煎への取り組みを行っています。国内外のコーヒーフェスティバルや ポップアップの参加、コラボレーションの企画を積極的に行うことことで、京都から世界へコーヒーの文化を発信し続けています。
    Kurasu comes from the Japanese word “to live” or “lifestyle.” Starting as an online homeware store, we are now globally recognised as the premiere shop selling Japanese coffee brewing equipments and feature a subscription service partnering with specialty coffee roasters from around Japan.
    We serve speciality coffee in our shop in Kyoto which opened in 2016, and Singapore in 2017. In 2018 we opened our 2nd Kyoto store as a roastery cafe in Fushimi Inari, along with our first store in Bangkok. We’re currently roasting with a Giesen W6A.
    Our aim is to showcase Japanese coffee culture to the world through introducing coffee products, roasters, and our own roasts. We are a coffee equipment retail store, cafe, coffee roaster, and a medium for specialty coffee culture.
    International: www.kurasu.kyoto
    日本:www.jp.kurasu.kyoto
    楽天市場:www.rakuten.co.jp/kurasu
    Instagram: / kurasu.kyoto
    Facebook: / kurasu.kyoto
    Pinterest: / kurasu
    Twitter: / kurasu_kyoto
    Coffee Subscription: www.kurasu.kyoto/subscription
    コーヒー定期購買:www.jp.kurasu.kyoto/subscription

Komentáře • 200

  • @ozstrider
    @ozstrider Před 4 lety +94

    I have fond memories of visiting Kurasu over the last few years, and now I am in lockdown (Melbourne, Australia) I have been dreaming of being able to come back and visit, but I dont know how far away it is. I recently bought a V60 kit and followed this method and as soon as I took one sip, I felt like I was taken back to a rainy day in Kyoto, sitting on the bench at Kurasu, sipping black coffee and watching the rain.
    Thanks for the video, hope I see you soon!

  • @jenplacido8123
    @jenplacido8123 Před 3 lety +5

    Adding your v60 tutorial to the list of recipes I would like to try with my own v60. Very informative and looks so easy to follow 😁😁😁

  • @projecktdrip220
    @projecktdrip220 Před 4 lety +75

    Thank you for adding English subtitles!

  • @aydinanwar8567
    @aydinanwar8567 Před 3 lety +1

    My first time using Hario V60 and followed this recipe. Coffee tastes great! loved it!

  • @philemotion8876
    @philemotion8876 Před 3 lety

    Very well made Kosuke San !
    Arigato gozaimasu ! 🙏

  • @egaahayy
    @egaahayy Před 3 lety +7

    This video is easy to learn love it😍🇮🇩☕

  • @Hazelminker
    @Hazelminker Před 3 lety +1

    Will definitely try to go to Kurasu next time I visit Kyoto !

  • @AndreyCK
    @AndreyCK Před 4 lety +3

    Thanx for sharing..ill try this method at home..

  • @uncleMors
    @uncleMors Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks for the v60 receipt, so helpfull for me 💯🙏🏻👍🏻

  • @dimdimdimsum8808
    @dimdimdimsum8808 Před 3 lety +13

    very similar to my routine, modified 40/60 with only 3 pour. i use 15 gr/225 water. the only difference is i'd finish the brew by 1:50 - 2:00 to maintain the sweetness of the coffee. nice video

    • @vivaanhoward6471
      @vivaanhoward6471 Před 2 lety

      instaBlaster...

    • @whothennow24
      @whothennow24 Před rokem +3

      I always wonder when people say they finish brewing after a certain time. That means you're not using all the water, right? You just take the V60 off while it's dripping?

  • @haindahh
    @haindahh Před 3 lety

    Arigatou, i learn a lot from this channel... i will try this recipe for my morning coffee routine :)

  • @timovanruiswijk8232
    @timovanruiswijk8232 Před 4 lety +10

    I love this recipe!! My v60 brewing was in a rut, and the results I got with this method are the best I've ever had (tried multiple methods already). Love your videos and great explanation by the barista!

    • @TheVinl82
      @TheVinl82 Před 4 lety

      Hi Timo what grind size did you use?

  • @waraiotoko1105
    @waraiotoko1105 Před 3 lety

    先日、エチオピア ハンベラ・ワメナ ケルーのレシピを教えて頂いた者です。ありがとうございました。お家でも近い味を出すことができ、美味しく飲ませて頂いております。

  • @shenaruto
    @shenaruto Před 4 lety +12

    Really miss the Kurasu crew at Kyoto. Had to cancel this year's trip to Japan in April due to Covid. Thanks for making this video and for satisfying my coffee addiction. Stay safe and healthy everyone!

    • @KurasuKyoto
      @KurasuKyoto  Před 4 lety +6

      Thanks so much for the comment. We truly appreciate it. We really miss all the beautiful faces we usually see during this season in Kyoto from all over the world. Hope we get to see you soon! Stay safe xx

  • @kimoutofnowhere3669
    @kimoutofnowhere3669 Před rokem

    I tried this recipe and I love it. Thank you for sharing this. 🤙☕

  • @Cunboss
    @Cunboss Před 4 lety +4

    Thank you for these very nice videos. Keep up the good work ! Waiting for an Origami dripper recipe :)

    • @KurasuKyoto
      @KurasuKyoto  Před 4 lety

      Thank you, it's coming very soon 😉

  • @paretocompanylimited9611

    The brewing process is very soothing! Almost like meditation. You know, every day have some me time, to concentrate in the brewing, and then have a great coffee!

  • @Doggieman1111
    @Doggieman1111 Před 3 lety

    Very nice video and easy to follow, thank you

  • @IndividualName
    @IndividualName Před 3 lety +8

    This video appeared as a recommendationat exactly the right moment. Sunday afternoon, about to prepare some coffee, and even worka beans at home. Looks good, will be tasting it right now.

    • @adrianScu
      @adrianScu Před 3 lety +1

      How was it?

    • @bufarah001
      @bufarah001 Před 3 lety +2

      @@adrianScu seems like it was his last cup of coffee.

    • @IndividualName
      @IndividualName Před 3 lety

      @@adrianScu Bit of a late reply… it tasted really nice and became my standard brewing method. For a while, worka disappeared from my local roaster‘s shop but last week they were back on the menu.

    • @adrianScu
      @adrianScu Před 2 lety

      @@IndividualName it's a great opportunity nonetheless to explore other coffees as well :-)

  • @PiotrWojnowski
    @PiotrWojnowski Před měsícem

    Thanks. It's a great recipe for my medium-roasted coffee 😀

    • @KurasuKyoto
      @KurasuKyoto  Před měsícem

      That's great to hear - thank you so much!

  • @AlokeshBagchi
    @AlokeshBagchi Před 5 měsíci

    Thank you so much, i tried your method , just now, it changes the coffee, its wonderful. Thanks ❤

  • @hartleytaslim3957
    @hartleytaslim3957 Před 3 lety +1

    Will try this tomorrow morning :) arigatou

  • @AlokeshBagchi
    @AlokeshBagchi Před 5 měsíci

    Thank You

  • @n6rcan
    @n6rcan Před 2 měsíci

    Hello! I been using your recipe a lot as my daily driver. both for Kalita wave and V60. I wonder if you also have a French press recipe? Thanks in advance 🍀

  • @emersonpires8312
    @emersonpires8312 Před 3 lety

    Muito bom este método!❤️

  • @ruangkitacoffeeandideamake7816

    Like this style

  • @minamed5963
    @minamed5963 Před 3 lety +11

    Excellent recipe and presentation. I was curious what that attachment used with the grinder was called, to make it automatic instead of manual.

    • @guyphongch
      @guyphongch Před 3 lety

      it’s hario smart g but you probably know it by now

  • @NA-yy1jw
    @NA-yy1jw Před 3 lety

    Hello, I would like to ask based on your experience, what are the pros and cons of the kasuya drip kettle and the kinto kettle, including the spout shape and which one have better control. I would like to know what is your preferred type between the two kettle. I really enjoy the recipe!

  • @julianism.
    @julianism. Před 2 lety +1

    in my experience, raising water temperature to 95 degrees works better, especially for the beans that I'm using. It's Ethiopia and light roast.

  • @eddyrmarquezg
    @eddyrmarquezg Před 3 lety

    Thanks 🙏🏼

  • @danfirth2678
    @danfirth2678 Před 4 lety +3

    This is amazing. Thank you so much. Any tips for scaling the recipe up?

  • @user-eo8zu2hg1e
    @user-eo8zu2hg1e Před 4 lety +1

    Very nice dripper! Looks like the Tetsu Kasuya's one from Hario.

    • @KurasuKyoto
      @KurasuKyoto  Před 3 lety +1

      It has original V60 ribbing, not unlike the Tetsu Kasuya one.

    • @user-eo8zu2hg1e
      @user-eo8zu2hg1e Před 3 lety

      @@KurasuKyoto Thank you for your reply and information. I have never seen the original V60 in black. :)

  • @user-bl3mh2cm1g
    @user-bl3mh2cm1g Před 3 lety

    Can you make a video using Kalita 101 please? I learned a lot from your vids

  • @IMelkor42
    @IMelkor42 Před 2 lety

    Did I just see that right? Did you rinse the carafe out after rinsing through the filter?
    If so I salute you! I thought I was going crazy. Nobody else is doing that or talking about it in these guides. There's still paper residue in your flask after rinsing the filter paper, it needs flushing out!
    Good to see I wasn't the first person to notice...

  • @chuva6488
    @chuva6488 Před 3 lety +2

    Great vibes in this video! Thank you for the clearest of the explanations around CZcams. New subscriber right here 🇲🇽☕

    • @Cenpanda
      @Cenpanda Před 3 lety +1

      Concuerdo. Directa, al grano, y fácil de seguir

  • @su-funchen2130
    @su-funchen2130 Před 3 lety +1

    thanks for the video. what is the name/type of the grinder that was used in the video? thanks a lot.

  • @km-fz6es
    @km-fz6es Před 2 lety

    tnx!!

  • @treasurehuntersmusic4863

    Thank you.

  • @kopiarumanis2157
    @kopiarumanis2157 Před 3 lety

    Awesome 👍☕

  • @eugenecheong6465
    @eugenecheong6465 Před 4 lety

    hope to see an iced filter version of this recipe :)

    • @KurasuKyoto
      @KurasuKyoto  Před 4 lety +5

      We will work on it :) Thanks for watching🙏

  • @cjoysoy
    @cjoysoy Před rokem

    Hello. I am hoping you could do a hario switch 03 recipe to make some 500-700ml brew. I'd appreciate some guidance on bigger volumes 🙂

  • @MINAY2
    @MINAY2 Před 3 lety +1

    how many clicks with the Hario Smart G for that grind size?

  • @MrHappy-oq7ot
    @MrHappy-oq7ot Před 9 měsíci

    this recipoe must be so sweet

  • @psw7029
    @psw7029 Před 3 lety +2

    I tried your method a few times for either more fruity flavor or nutty flavor coffee bean and it worked well for both! Even using the same water temperature!👍🏻👍🏻 very useful video and I’ll definitely pay a visit when I travel to Japan again;)
    But if I wanna make more coffee in one time, do I just double everything or can’t double the brewing time? Thank you🙇🏻‍♀️

    • @TheTalemaster
      @TheTalemaster Před 2 lety

      TBH, you'd logically have to double the brew time, since it's unlikely twice the volume of water could pass through the cone in the same time as a smaller brew ratio. More liquid volume = more time spent passing through the filter.

  • @tippykaffu4047
    @tippykaffu4047 Před 2 lety

    I had been using this recipe not knowing kurasu already did the same

  • @chrisyeung162
    @chrisyeung162 Před 2 lety

    Has anyone done this method with the Comandante grinder? I'm curious what click setting would be appropriate for the given recipe (13g: 200ml water)?

  • @painpeace3619
    @painpeace3619 Před 3 lety

    Good video..

  • @nickoilhaaaaam
    @nickoilhaaaaam Před 3 lety

    what kind of water dispenser product do you use?

  • @JohnVander70
    @JohnVander70 Před 3 lety

    Thank you, this is a great recipe!

  • @halilon
    @halilon Před 3 lety +2

    U are great man, that's why i love japanese people

  • @jacoboblanco1555
    @jacoboblanco1555 Před 3 lety

    It’s interesting, I’ve been having lots of trouble with long drawdown times with the v60 tabbed filter paper even with coarser grinds. I wonder if its my technique. I’ll give this method a try, you avoid the edges and stir more vigorously than I do.

    • @markhall2733
      @markhall2733 Před 3 lety

      Same here. I tried this method today and I have better coffee! Will keep working on my technique and grind size to keep improving!

    • @navinraju
      @navinraju Před 3 lety

      I used to have long draw times too when I first started using the V60. One thing I started consciously doing is making sure my filter cone is gently shoved down (not enough to distort the filter) through the hole. I haven’t had an issue since then. Not sure what I was doing before.

  • @tomm1tch
    @tomm1tch Před 3 lety +2

    That grinder 🤓

  • @ximono
    @ximono Před 3 lety

    ありがとうございます (arigato gozaimasu)

  • @vinomartadinata4915
    @vinomartadinata4915 Před 3 lety +1

    Can I say that you are using 1:15 ratio? And if i want to add up the coffee amount i will get the same good taste that i have with this 200 gram setup?

  • @arieorange
    @arieorange Před 3 lety

    Thanks for the tutorial

  • @cookcook4845
    @cookcook4845 Před 4 lety +2

    hey, little confusion here. by coarser than granulated sugar. do you guys mean powdered sugar? because in my country granulated sugar is like medium coarse on grind size :(

    • @fadlicuy2922
      @fadlicuy2922 Před 3 lety

      but powdered sugar was like super fine tho. I use manual grinder, IDK if my method is proper, but I think 5 to 6 clicks start from the zero setting gave me the same grind level as kurasu's

  • @kenvme
    @kenvme Před 4 lety +2

    Is this the new method? In your blogsite it's 12g to 200g coffee. I'ma try this on my next.

    • @KurasuKyoto
      @KurasuKyoto  Před 3 lety +5

      We have been generally doing 13g more recently. Depending on the coffee as well. Thanks for watching.

    • @xPostpunk
      @xPostpunk Před 3 lety

      @@KurasuKyoto Yep, I’ve noticed 13g has a richer taste despite the difference only being 1 gram.

  • @oj3711
    @oj3711 Před 3 lety +1

    撹拌する方法、試したことがないのでやってみます
    豆の量に対して、使用するお湯の量が多い気がしたのですが、抽出量はどれくらいなのでしょうか?

    • @KurasuKyoto
      @KurasuKyoto  Před 3 lety +3

      攪拌ですが、コーヒーの煎具合にもよります。浅煎りはコーヒーとお湯が深煎りのコーヒーと比べ馴染みにくく、均一に浸透させ、チャネリング(コーヒーの層から不均一にお湯が浸透すること)を防ぐ効果がります。
      コーヒーと注ぐお湯の比率に関しては浅煎りの場合1:15から16。13gに対して200gであれば1:15.3ぐらいですね。もう少し深入りの場合は1:12から13ぐらいを普段目安に私たちはしております。
      注ぐお湯の量が200gの場合、抽出量は180gぐらいになります。
      是非お試しください!

  • @MapleMeHoney
    @MapleMeHoney Před 4 lety +42

    This tasted so much better than James Hoffman's method. Thank you!!! My coffee never tasted so good!! =D

    • @mes0ssi
      @mes0ssi Před 3 lety +1

      Same 🙏🏼

    • @misterpeanutbutter125
      @misterpeanutbutter125 Před 3 lety +2

      Of course, James’s recipe suck

    • @UserNameNiemand
      @UserNameNiemand Před 3 lety +18

      Not trying to advocate anyone but how's that recipe is any different from James one?
      As far as I see here the ratio is 6.5g / 100ml, where as James uses 6g / 100ml and the temperature here is ~7-8deg differ. In this video the coffee is tad bit darker than on another and amount of coffee brewed is not the same too, that might be why temp is a bit lower. Besides those two things everything is pretty much the same. Probably some technique is not exactly same here and there but overall seems to be quite same to me IMHO.

    • @MapleMeHoney
      @MapleMeHoney Před 3 lety +2

      @@UserNameNiemand your observation is similar to asking how is Hungry Jacks/Burger King different time Macdonalds? Aren’t they all hamburgers at the end of the day ?

    • @Leapoffaith4
      @Leapoffaith4 Před 3 lety +19

      @@UserNameNiemand From what I've experienced I believe the biggest thing that might make this recipe tase better is the dose, and following that, the grind size. When using smaller doses you have to grind a little finer to avoid under extraction, with that, more surface area of the coffee is exposed which usually results in a higher extraction, and with these kinds of smaller dose brews, the higher extraction just gives the cup more defined flavor, at least from my testing. I think for anyone to say that James Hoffmann's method "sucks" is dumb, but to say that they'd prefer this instead is a completely reasonable claim and might just be a matter of preference.

  • @Zakariat89
    @Zakariat89 Před 3 lety

    How many clicks on commandante?

  • @dimielkana
    @dimielkana Před 3 lety

    May I know what device did u use to that grinder so that it become automatic?
    Excellent presentation by the way. Always following your method on Instagram.

    • @aimanisa9610
      @aimanisa9610 Před 3 lety

      Hario smart g grinder with electric motor attachment. don't bother. find something like a Chestnut C2 or if you got some budget, comandante or if you're filthy rich, Kinu. better grind consistency with fewer fines for the price compared this shit grinder+motor. no matter what brew method I do, there will always be those over-extracted AND under-extracted traits. (i owned one)

    • @dimielkana
      @dimielkana Před 3 lety

      @@aimanisa9610 thanks for your info. I thought it would be suitable for any kind of handgrinders.

    • @KurasuKyoto
      @KurasuKyoto  Před 3 lety +1

      Hi Dimi
      Here's the grinder we use:
      Grinder: Hario Coffee Mill Smart G
      kurasu.kyoto/products/hario-coffee-mill-smart-g
      Hario Mobile Mobile Mill STICK
      kurasu.kyoto/products/hario-mobile-mill-stick
      You can check our video to see the mobile mill stick in action:
      czcams.com/video/nQTObsPOpK0/video.html&t
      Thank you xoxo
      Kurasu

    • @dimielkana
      @dimielkana Před 3 lety

      @@KurasuKyoto Thanyouu 🙏🏻 really appreciate that.

  • @zalmansad1729
    @zalmansad1729 Před 2 lety

    Would this be ok for hario 02 size?

  • @Romegga
    @Romegga Před 4 lety +1

    Heyy would the grinds need to be coarser if i am using this method for the tetsu kasuya model v60 due to the slower draw down?

    • @KurasuKyoto
      @KurasuKyoto  Před 4 lety +1

      Yes, Tetsu recommends a coarser grind.

    • @Romegga
      @Romegga Před 4 lety

      @@KurasuKyoto Thanks so much

  • @boywithkanjibag
    @boywithkanjibag Před 3 lety

    Grind size for a hario grinder?

  • @MapleMeHoney
    @MapleMeHoney Před 4 lety +14

    Could you please advise for 400ml - do we just double everything and time?

    • @bedahal-bedah243
      @bedahal-bedah243 Před 3 lety +5

      Hi there, this could work
      Coffee: 26g
      Water: 400g
      90c ~91c (194F)
      60g water
      45 sec bloom
      Pour up to 200g
      90 sec
      Pour up to 400g

    • @Leapoffaith4
      @Leapoffaith4 Před 3 lety +8

      Don't double your times, keep bloom between 30-45 sec, but do double all of your weight measurements. Coarsen up your grind as needed, you'll likely find success in a 3-4min brew

    • @arpit5317
      @arpit5317 Před 3 lety

      The time should not be more than 4 mins otherwise it would be too long in contact with water and will taste bitter.
      The amount of coffee x 2 = Water you put in for bloom, so let’s say you are using 30 grams of coffee than just add 60grams of water in bloom. And then it’s in ratios. I hope this helps.

  • @micro1243
    @micro1243 Před 3 lety +1

    How many clicks do you recommend on the hario grinder?

    • @julianism.
      @julianism. Před 2 lety

      same question! i've tried 25 clicks for light roasted coffee, 27 for dark

  • @ximono
    @ximono Před 3 lety +1

    Brewing begins at 3:11

  • @cafelabmaudie
    @cafelabmaudie Před 2 lety

    중간에 저어 주어야 하는 거군요. 영상마다 시간이나 방법이 조금씩 다른데 그 이유가 궁금하긴 합니다.

  • @AmeerAimanAzmi
    @AmeerAimanAzmi Před 3 lety

    Try this but my coffee come out sour. Should i grind finer? My brew time is around 2mins19sec.

    • @123stdl
      @123stdl Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah grind a little finer until you hit that sweet spot. If you have a inconsistent grinder that might make it a little difficult

    • @AmeerAimanAzmi
      @AmeerAimanAzmi Před 3 lety +1

      @@123stdl okay. Thanks man. I'll try it out later.

    • @sebaba001
      @sebaba001 Před 3 lety

      Also you can try hotter water temperature. 2.19 is good time, even a bit slow, so grinding finer will make it slower. Higher temperatures extract more without slowing the process.

  • @raymondlim8474
    @raymondlim8474 Před 3 lety

    what if i only want to make for 1 cup only for myself?

    • @KurasuKyoto
      @KurasuKyoto  Před 3 lety +1

      Hi Raymond - this video shows for 1 cup. The end weight should be around 180g

  • @daiiividgao8152
    @daiiividgao8152 Před 3 lety

    grind size?

  • @whothennow24
    @whothennow24 Před rokem

    There's no way all that coffee in the pitcher is 200g (actually, it would be even less because the grounds will retain about 30-40g of water). I just did this method and ended up with only ~160g of liquid. My single cup looks like it has about as much as one of the two cups in the video. Was the resulting pitcher actually from a much larger brew?

    • @KurasuKyoto
      @KurasuKyoto  Před rokem +1

      Hi, as you have mentioned coffee grounds retain water and so the finished brew would be around 160-170g, a good single serve. Kosuke in the video just shared the finished 170g of coffee into two cups for him and his colleague filming to try :)

  • @erfanmbkk
    @erfanmbkk Před 3 lety

    For 1zpresso q2 grinder ,how many click do you recommend?

    • @MrHappy-oq7ot
      @MrHappy-oq7ot Před 9 měsíci

      22 OR 2 rotations and 2 extra numbers(6 clicks)

  • @mixeddrinks8100
    @mixeddrinks8100 Před 4 lety +9

    that grinder doesn't look too good for light roast, wonder if it is even powerful enough for it

  • @robbysaputra5217
    @robbysaputra5217 Před 3 lety

    Apa airnya tidak kebanyakan 300ml untuk 13g?

  • @etern4lgod
    @etern4lgod Před 4 lety

    What TDS and extraction rate does this yield?

    • @daviding78
      @daviding78 Před 4 lety

      etern4lgod i did this on a Honduras grinded on timemore nano and a crystal dripper, i got 18.53% extraction and 1.38% tds, i then tried it on a CoE 2019 Brazil n a Burrundi , all similar extractions and tds%

  • @guyphongch
    @guyphongch Před 3 lety

    does anyone know the name of the water dispenser at the back that he’s using?

  • @dinosaurusdog9118
    @dinosaurusdog9118 Před 3 lety

    Please tell me what size of v60 did you use?

    • @KurasuKyoto
      @KurasuKyoto  Před 3 lety

      We're using the 01 model here. Thank you

  • @jamjamjamjamjam182
    @jamjamjamjamjam182 Před 3 lety +1

    2倍の量淹れたい場合は、
    単純に豆もお湯の量も2倍の量でいいんでしょうか?

    • @KurasuKyoto
      @KurasuKyoto  Před 3 lety +1

      基本的にはそう考えていただいて問題ございません。もう少しでブログに2杯、3杯どりの抽出方法の注意点を掲載した記事をアップしますので是非参考にされてください。

  • @georgelopez2426
    @georgelopez2426 Před 3 lety

    I'm getting bitter brews with multiple pours after the bloom. A single continuous pour like the Hoffman method yields a much sweeter result

    • @KurasuKyoto
      @KurasuKyoto  Před 3 lety +8

      Really depends on the coffee as well and your taste. In general you're get a stronger extraction with separate pours and lighter with single. We do single or double pours depending on the coffee we're using. If another method works, by all means that's what we would recommend.

    • @hermanwillem7057
      @hermanwillem7057 Před 3 lety

      Every coffee is different and has different approach dude, no method can apply perfectly to every kind of coffee

  • @JosephReference
    @JosephReference Před 3 lety

    holy shit i want everything on here

  • @euroe12
    @euroe12 Před 5 měsíci

    I'm not rinsing my filter anywhere near enough. Noted.

  • @burakklc4945
    @burakklc4945 Před 3 lety

    i normally use like 18to24 grams per 300gr water, didnt think 13 grams would be drinkable too

    • @KurasuKyoto
      @KurasuKyoto  Před 3 lety +1

      We're usually aiming for a 1:15 - 1:16 coffee to water ratio.

    • @burakklc4945
      @burakklc4945 Před 3 lety

      @@KurasuKyoto my bad thought it was 13grams per 330mL

  • @user-qv1qu9ww8z
    @user-qv1qu9ww8z Před 3 lety

    3湯目の撹拌は何故行うのでしょうか?

    • @KurasuKyoto
      @KurasuKyoto  Před 3 lety +3

      1.コーヒーが早く落ちるように、ドリッパーのリブに沿って、水流を作るため。早く落とす理由は、抽出後半は雑味が出やすいので、なるべく早く終えたいからです。
      2.全てのコーヒー粉から均一に抽出されるように、ドリッパー壁面の粉を落とすためです。

    • @user-qv1qu9ww8z
      @user-qv1qu9ww8z Před 3 lety

      @@KurasuKyoto
      ご返信ありがとうございます!早速試してみます!

  • @jeromefrancisco5549
    @jeromefrancisco5549 Před 2 lety

    Hi how many click for timemore c2?

    • @taiboldman
      @taiboldman Před 2 lety

      For lightly roasted beans like the one used in this video, it's 18-19 clicks.

  • @mousqy
    @mousqy Před 3 lety

    i see his balmuda toaster

  • @animationlegostudio
    @animationlegostudio Před 3 lety

    does this work for dark roasted coffee?

    • @simonm.1122
      @simonm.1122 Před 3 lety

      Finer grind for a dark roast since it is less dense. Lighter roasts need somewhat coarser grinds and shorter extraction times, in my experience.

    • @ximono
      @ximono Před 3 lety

      @@simonm.1122 I've read the opposite: “I personally also always grind my beans finer if they’re a lighter roast and dark roasts on the coarser side. This is because dark roast tends to be more bitter in flavour to begin with, so a longer contact time between water and coffee would result in over extraction.”

    • @aelfwine88
      @aelfwine88 Před 3 lety

      Yes, but I propose don't adjust the grind size for that as Simon suggested.
      Lets step back a little:
      There are several extraction methods that can make you a great coffee and not all extraction method works well with the different kind of beans. Still all methods are based around 2 things: the pour volume ratios and the timing of each pours which include the optimal maximum extraction time as well. Modifying these change what flavors you aim to extract and how from the beans. This means if you want to follow a method you should aim to respect the ratios and timings as much as possible.
      Since the grind size has the most influence on how much water can you let through of your v60 you should use the grind size to set your timings: basically how much time you want to give the water for extraction in every step. So if you want a full extraction time of 2:15 (which is in the short end) like in the method you set the grind size till you archive that end time for your specific bean with that method.
      Additionally you can differ +/-1 from that setting since a finer grind tends to give more richness of flavor (eg more fruitiness) in expanse of maybe getting some unwanted taste like sourness. More deviation from the optimal grind size will change your timings and the ending time too much and more than ~15 sec of deviation is not recommended.
      So if you work with darker roast you just need to lower your temperature. At lower temperature the bitter tasting flavors are not getting extracted that much.
      General rule for water temperatures: Dark: 85-89; Medium: 89-92; Light: 92-95
      Additionally if you want a more richer taste you can play around the base coffee/water ration of 1/15 and change it to 1/14. Still keep in mind that you need to adjust your grind size after that as well.

  • @qiqx1151
    @qiqx1151 Před 8 měsíci

    aregato senpai

  • @kenjitakayama903
    @kenjitakayama903 Před 3 lety

    What grinder is that? Thanks

    • @KurasuKyoto
      @KurasuKyoto  Před 3 lety +1

      Hi Kenji,
      Here's the grinder we use:
      Grinder: Hario Coffee Mill Smart G
      kurasu.kyoto/products/hario-coffee-mill-smart-g
      Hario Mobile Mobile Mill STICK
      kurasu.kyoto/products/hario-mobile-mill-stick
      You can check our video to see the mobile mill stick in action:
      czcams.com/video/nQTObsPOpK0/video.html&t
      Thank you xoxo
      Kurasu

  • @mukimuki64
    @mukimuki64 Před 3 lety

    前から行きたいと思っていたコーヒ屋さん。
    コロナで行けない。
    行けると思うけど。
    店側によってマスクの着用があるから、なかなか遠出しにくい。
    終息したら必ず行く。

  • @koichi6508
    @koichi6508 Před 3 lety +6

    3:36おもてたんと違う🤔

  • @pcchoon
    @pcchoon Před 3 lety +2

    that grinder...

    • @KurasuKyoto
      @KurasuKyoto  Před 3 lety +1

      Here's the grinder we use:
      Grinder: Hario Coffee Mill Smart G
      kurasu.kyoto/products/hario-coffee-mill-smart-g
      Hario Mobile Mobile Mill STICK
      kurasu.kyoto/products/hario-mobile-mill-stick
      You can check our video to see the mobile mill stick in action:
      czcams.com/video/nQTObsPOpK0/video.html&t
      Thank you xoxo
      Kurasu

  • @maxpain3294
    @maxpain3294 Před 3 lety

    What grinder is that?

    • @KurasuKyoto
      @KurasuKyoto  Před 3 lety

      Hi Max,
      Here's the grinder we use:
      Grinder: Hario Coffee Mill Smart G
      kurasu.kyoto/products/hario-coffee-mill-smart-g
      Hario Mobile Mobile Mill STICK
      kurasu.kyoto/products/hario-mobile-mill-stick
      You can check our video to see the mobile mill stick in action:
      czcams.com/video/nQTObsPOpK0/video.html&t
      Thank you xoxo
      Kurasu

  • @7akm123
    @7akm123 Před 3 lety

    30g wait 30 seconds
    70g wait 30 seconds
    100g wait 30 seconds
    Am I right ?

    • @adb.909
      @adb.909 Před 3 lety

      Yup

    • @judenoble2207
      @judenoble2207 Před 3 lety +1

      No I think the times start from beginning of the pour. So at 30 seconds you begin to add the 70g of water but then at 60 seconds you add the last 100g. It might have taken 15 seconds for the 70g of water to be added in which case you might only be waiting 15 seconds before starting the 100g pour.
      -
      The best way to view it is as a timer, so you start the clock as soon as you start the first pour so at 0:00 begin adding the 30g pour. When the clock hits 0:30 begin the 70g pour. When the clock hits 1:00 begin the 100g pour.

    • @adb.909
      @adb.909 Před 3 lety

      ​@@judenoble2207 It's the same thing though right? Just the initial 30s (to pour 30g) was omitted so its shifted; adds up to 2 minutes as expected

    • @judenoble2207
      @judenoble2207 Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah it is. The point I was making is that you don’t wait 30 seconds after the pour finishes. Rather it is 30 seconds after you start pouring. So, for example, if you take 20 seconds to do the second pour (70g water) then there is only a 10 second gap before beginning the third pour

  • @MAXXFIGO
    @MAXXFIGO Před 3 lety +1

    Finally, somebody uses a spoon to take the beans from the bag, hate when they use bare hands, disgusting, nice video

    • @Noid1220
      @Noid1220 Před 3 lety

      I use my hands when I brew at home.

  • @samuelrincon4407
    @samuelrincon4407 Před 3 lety

    By stirring the bloom with a spoon, you prevent it from being evenly bloomed. you can even see in the video that some of your bloom isn't even in the water. you also pour way too gently. It's a percolation brew, not an infusion brew. you need agitation in the first 40% of the pour or the coffee will be under-extracted. then pour gently in the last 60%

    • @Stephan9
      @Stephan9 Před 3 lety +1

      He stirs to get the water to make contact with as much of the grinds as possible as quick as possible. You are better off stirring then hard pouring because a hard pour at the beginning will create channels in the coffee bed when you go to pour gently after.

    • @samuelrincon4407
      @samuelrincon4407 Před 3 lety

      @@Stephan9 it’s not about pouring it hard in the beginning, there’s an ideal amount of disruption you want in the beginning, but the initial disruption has to be comparably more than the second pour and the second pour should def not disrupt the bed too much. and swirling it prevents the problems that spoon stirring shows in the video. you want to keep the bloom in the bloom water, and stirring it with a spoon takes the grounds out of the water, as is plainly obvious in the video

    • @TheReapersSon
      @TheReapersSon Před 3 lety

      @@samuelrincon4407 I thought it looked a little uneven. Glad my instinct was correct.

    • @Noid1220
      @Noid1220 Před 3 lety +1

      I bet you're an award winning barista.

    • @samuelrincon4407
      @samuelrincon4407 Před 3 lety

      @@Noid1220 nah im a walking living breathing nut. Just semen in human form commenting on a stupid fucking youtube video for no reason. Mostly just venting honestly

  • @psobecke
    @psobecke Před 3 lety

    200g of water for 2 people... I drink 700g myself 😂🤓

  • @jeffhildreth9244
    @jeffhildreth9244 Před 3 lety +1

    For my taste and experience, you just made hot, brown water.

  • @mights2855
    @mights2855 Před 3 lety

    なんか知ってるのと違うな…これが正しいのか?

  • @abby9434
    @abby9434 Před 3 lety

    参考ならん

    • @KurasuKyoto
      @KurasuKyoto  Před 3 lety +2

      どのあたりが改善できますでしょうか?