Eyedust

joined 1 week ago
[–] Eyedust@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 1 hour ago

Yeah, true. I'm pretty good at the balancing circus act. I've only had one mistake and I was very tired that morning and forgot to put the filter cap on. Just a little spilled though, mostly I just wound up with a bunch of grounds in my cup. I may still try the valve or the Prismo, though.

[–] Eyedust@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 1 hour ago

100% subscribed. I'm the type to do a week of research of how and what before I push the buy button on something, and this will a help a ton. Thank you.

[–] Eyedust@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 5 hours ago (2 children)

I can imagine its a nightmare to clean. Stuff like this is why I keep rugged reusable pipe cleaners at the kitchen sink. Not to mention I believe you have to use the stainless steel filter even if you use a paper filter?

I would think that just a paper filter would immediately siphon into the hole. Would be nice if they just made a metal insert with holes like the standard cap for paper filters.

[–] Eyedust@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 15 hours ago* (last edited 15 hours ago) (2 children)

That's fair. It really does make a great cup of coffee. I just really want to try things like pour over and moka pot.

Absolutely! I use an app called Timer Widget - Tea Time. I swear I found it on F-Droid, but it seems to have migrated to Google Play only. It has no app interface, but rather is a widget. It's customizable, you can choose the color of the timer and active timer and change the volume plus the sound that plays.

https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=net.hirschkorn.teatime Tea Time Timer On

But there's another simple one on F-Droid called Cuppa that's very good, too. If you want something more complex that will go step by step, there's Cofi - Brew Timer on F-Droid. It uses exact instruction input and a timer that will go down the list in order.

[–] Eyedust@lemmy.dbzer0.com 5 points 17 hours ago* (last edited 17 hours ago)

Admittedly, standard plunge is the best and easiest way to do it if you just want a good cup of coffee. I went overboard testing and fiddling with this method. It really is a ritual, lol. I feel like a kitchen alchemist sometimes.

In my defense, I spend a little more to get a good brand of coffee straight from the roaster's site, as well as a local coffee I found that is absolutely delicious. I figured I might as well take the time to get my money's worth out of them. This method takes upwards of fifteen minutes, and is not great if you just need to plunge and get somewhere.

 

I understand that the Aeropress is by no means the best way to make coffee, but I'd like to think I've got a good thing going with it. It's certainly a step up from the "throw x bulk preground brand from the store into the dripper", though. And it's a cheaper method, which is okay by me.

I've come to love it. I make coffee, loose leaf tea, and yerba in it, depending on what I feel that morning. For those of you that use the Aeropress, I'd like to share a sort of frankenstein recipe I made as well as hear some of yours to try out. My recipe is a combination of two champion's recipes with my own coffee measurements. According to an assortment of coffee calculators, I should be using nearly double the amount of ground coffee that I do, but I can get a great flavor and strength with a lesser amount of beans.

My Frankenstein Aeropress Recipe (Americano, Inverted Method, Standard Aeropress Size)

Makes: 20oz (US standard/ 591ml)

  • Grind 25 grams of beans. The grind size will vary between roasts, but usually I do somewhere between espresso and drip on the Hario Skerton Pro for a true medium roast.
  • Boil water to exactly 194f/90c. An electric kettle with temp setting helps immensely here.
  • Invert your Aeropress and place your grounded material in. Add just a slight bit of water, enough to cover the grounds. This may take some getting used to; you can start small and keep adding bit by bit to get what you need. I still sometimes over-fill. Stir with a spoon until you get what I like to call a "wet concrete" consistency (not the best analogy, but...). Make sure all your ground material is wet.
  • Let sit/bloom for one minute. If your roast is very fresh, you may notice your coffee rise and take on a sort of half-baked brownie appearance.
  • After one minute, stir generously almost like a dough. If it's a darker roast or not as fresh, it may just make a sort of silky liquid. If it's more of a dryer concrete consistency, use a bit of chopping with your spoon and fold. Do this for just a bit.
  • Add water until filled to the top of the press. Be VERY careful here. I can get it right to the lip without spilling, but a little extra air will not hurt. Please do not burn yourself.
  • Stir again after filled and set a timer for two and a half minutes.
  • During these minutes, get your filter in the cap and wet it with water. This doesn't change the flavor, but rather keeps the filter from slipping out when using the inverted method.
  • When your brew timer is up, stir again. If you like a more bitter coffee, try to dip some of the foam from the top into the mixture. Alternatively, if you like a sweeter coffee you can place a napkin on top and soak up the foam (I did this by accident when I spilled a bit on the stir).
  • Place your filter cap on and put your mug over the Aeropress. Flip both (be very very VERY careful). After the Aeropress is safely on top, shake it a little to get any leftover grounds off the plunger.
  • Let the coffee settle for about twenty or so seconds.
  • Slide the Aeropress left and right then back and forward to even the material for the plunge.
  • Plunge slowly. This part is a bit of work, since the Aeropress wasn't really designed for this much ground material. When you hear the hiss of air, stop plunging. Plunge the little bit of leftover air into the sink and empty your Aeropress into the trash.
  • Add your desired sugar and cream. Fill almost to the top with your hot water and add a bit of cold water until you get your desired drinking temp.
  • Stir and enjoy.

I've found that this makes a very flavorful cup of coffee, despite using only 2/3 the suggested amount of beans to make it according to Aeropress calculators. I have not tried this recipe as a regular espresso; I haven't reached that peak of coffee enjoyment yet, having only started getting back into it in the past year. I can't remember the names of the champions that I mixed up this recipe from, but it also takes some steps from a few tip tutorials.

I will probably be switching to pour over at some point, because the amount of requests I'm getting from friends and family for coffee is getting overwhelming for the amount this makes. As a note, this method works great for loose leaf tea. Take your tea steep time and cut off a minute for steeping in just a bit of water, just like blooming. This ensures that the tea leaves stay at the bottom of the Aeropress when adding the rest of your water. So for black tea (4 minutes and 30 seconds recommended steep time) I do one minute for the "bloom" and then three and a half minutes for the steep at full water (212f/100c). I usually do 2 grams of tea for each 6 oz of water.

If you're unaccustomed to or have never heard of the inverted method, please take a moment to look up and watch how it's done. Hot water is no joke, save yourself from possible skin grafts. It is more than okay to use these measurements and timings using the regular method. Alternatively, you could use the Fellow Prismo to the same effect as inverting.

[–] Eyedust@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 3 days ago

Hmmm, strange. I guess you could try ProtonUp-Qt and inject GE's newest Proton in and see if that works. Also, there are some games that wouldn't run for me until I installed the Steamworks Common Redistributables from the tools page in my library. Threw me off recently because I swear that the last time I was on Arch those autoinstalled after switching my compatibility over to Proton.

[–] Eyedust@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 4 days ago

Big corp facts.

[–] Eyedust@lemmy.dbzer0.com 16 points 4 days ago (2 children)

Mullvad, (the vpn, I have not tried the browser) uses a single account number as both name and password, no emails. It allows for multiple anonymous payment methods and it's open source.

Sliiiiightly more trustworthy than Google imo.

[–] Eyedust@lemmy.dbzer0.com 9 points 5 days ago

As a (currently) CachyOS user, I would like to point out that their custom mirrors don't always reflect the newest version of packages, too. So if your package has a bug you may have to wait an extra day or two for it to reflect the fixed version after it drops. That or manually install the git.

Just make love with Timeshift and for the love of god don't use topgrade if you don't know what you're doing. Thankfully, because of rule number one, Timeshift told me the topgrade nightmare was over and tucked me back into bed with a glass of warm milk and a bedtime story.

[–] Eyedust@lemmy.dbzer0.com 14 points 6 days ago
alias ty='exit'
[–] Eyedust@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 1 week ago

Thankfully compiling on Windows was as easy as searching for a guide online. When I switched to CachyOS there was also a package in the AUR that seems well maintained.

I like that LibreSprite exists though. I wonder if it can use Aseprite's extensions. I might have to check it out just to see.

Once my financial situation is settled I do want to pay. Aseprite is an amazing tool and the devs deserve my money at this point. They don't ask much and still keep it available to compile for free. That's real marketing, imo.

[–] Eyedust@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 1 week ago

We're that one cousin no one talks about.

view more: next ›