Chemex
A wine decanter? Not quite. This contraption is the wonderfully charming Chemex. Invented by Peter Schlumbohm in 1941, the design has remained largely unchanged. Great for entertaining – it makes a lot of coffee, and looks good while doing it.
Not got the tools you need yet? Buy a Chemex from us here.
Result
A clean, light-medium bodied brewGood for
Dinner parties and impressing friends
October 01, 2018
How to make it
- 1. Place the tripled layered section of the filter paper on the spout side of the glass jar.
- 2. Give it a rinse through with hot water, then tip away the excess.
- 3. Place your ground coffee in the filter paper. Level it out with a gentle shake.
- 4. Put it all on the scale.
- 5. Start a timer, then pour 50g of water into the grounds, until they’re saturated. Watch them bloom.
- 6. After 30 seconds, pour in 200g more water.
- 7. Then at 90 seconds, add 200g more.
- 8. All your water (450g) should be in by the 90-second mark. Now, let it finish dripping.
- 9. After four minutes, your brew should be good to go.
What you'll need
- 6 Cup Chemex
- Kettle
- Burr grinder (optional)
- Spoon
- 25g of freshly ground coffee per 400ml cup
- Hario Kettle (optional – but helps to extract evenly)
- Filter paper
- Measuring spoon or scales (optional)
- Cup (for waste)
Dose, Brew Time, etc
- Coffee Dose 25g
- Brew Water 400g/ml
- Water Temp 94˚C
- Overall Brew Time 4:00min
- Grind Size Medium - in between Demerara sugar and rock salt
- Top Tip If your brew is taking longer than expected, coarsen the grind. Or try a finer grind if the extraction’s running short
Not got the tools you need yet? Buy a Chemex from us here.