Difference between revisions of "French Press"

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== Description ==  
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== Description ==
A french press is for making coffee and/or tea. You put the loose coffee grounds or tea leaves in the bottom, add very hot water, then put on the top with the plunger raised. After it has brewed long enough, (about 2+ minutes for coffee) push the plunger down, separating the grounds/leaves from the water. Generally speaking, a french press which has been used for coffee regularly has too much residual coffee flavor on it to be a good choice for tea.<br><br>
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A french press is for making coffee and/or tea. You put the loose coffee grounds or tea leaves in the bottom, add very hot water, then put on the top with the plunger raised. After it has brewed long enough, (about 2+ minutes for coffee) push the plunger down, separating the grounds/leaves from the water. Generally speaking, a french press which has been used for coffee regularly has too much residual coffee flavor on it to be a good choice for tea.<br /><br />
  
 
About three heaping tablespoons of coffee is enough for one pot.  
 
About three heaping tablespoons of coffee is enough for one pot.  

Latest revision as of 00:11, 18 March 2014


French Press
FrenchPress.jpg
Owner/Loaner PS:One
Serial Number SERIAL NUMBER
Make/Model MODEL NUMBER
Arrival Date DATE
Usability yes
Contact CONTACT PERSON
Where KITCHEN
Authorization Needed NO
Hackable NO
Estimated Value ~$15
Host Area {{{hostarea}}}


French Press Area: {{{hostarea}}} https://wiki.pumpingstationone.org/wiki/French_Press



Description

A french press is for making coffee and/or tea. You put the loose coffee grounds or tea leaves in the bottom, add very hot water, then put on the top with the plunger raised. After it has brewed long enough, (about 2+ minutes for coffee) push the plunger down, separating the grounds/leaves from the water. Generally speaking, a french press which has been used for coffee regularly has too much residual coffee flavor on it to be a good choice for tea.

About three heaping tablespoons of coffee is enough for one pot.

Water just off the boil work well for coffee.

Coffee that is ground too fine will move through the filter, leaving grounds in the coffee.

Coffee that is ground too coarsely may clog the filter, preventing the plunger/filter from being pressed down easily or smoothly. If the water can't pass through the coffee grounds, the edges of the spring-loaded filter may separate from the glass sides, causing a "burp" that can send coffee grounds into the coffee, and grounds and hot water out of the pot and onto you.