Everyday Beans Podcast - Mostly About Coffee and Other Stuff

The Myth of the One-Pour Brewer

16 min · 2 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio The Myth of the One-Pour Brewer

Descripción

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2412927/fan_mail/new] In this episode, I take you through one of the more humbling moments I've had as a coffee brewer. I picked up the Hario Mugen — a brewer marketed specifically as a one-pour specialist — and I went all in on mastering it. I ignored Hario's own recipe, went finer than felt comfortable, slowed my pour down, and eventually cracked the code. I was genuinely excited. Then curiosity got the better of me, and I decided to run a controlled side-by-side test between the Mugen and the Hario V60 using the exact same recipe, same temperature, same bloom, and a TDS meter to back it all up. The result? They tasted the same. The TDS numbers were nearly identical. And I just sat there thinking — Hario, what did you build this thing for? What came out of that moment wasn't just frustration. It was actually one of the more important realizations I've had about gear, mastery, and what it really means to brew good coffee. I talk about why staying with one device long enough to understand its full range matters more than owning the right device. I also get honest about how I took the V60 for granted for years, never really pushing it to its limits — and how the Mugen, of all things, taught me to stop doing that. If you're chasing gear hoping the next brewer unlocks something the current one can't, this episode is going to hit close to home. By listening, you'll learn why deep familiarity with one piece of equipment is more powerful than rotating through a collection, and how understanding your brewer is what actually gives you control over your cup. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2412927/support] For good tasty coffee, check us out at: everydaybeans.com For tips, tricks and still trying to figure it out: https://www.youtube.com/@everyday-beans

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302 episodios

episode When the Gear Finally Goes Quiet artwork

When the Gear Finally Goes Quiet

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2412927/fan_mail/new] For years I treated the grinder, the water, and the brewer like obstacles standing between me and a good cup of coffee. In this episode I talk through how that finally changed. I walk back through my own journey, from the French press that first got me hooked, through the seven or eight grinders I've owned, the long stretch of plain tap water, and the endless internal debate over which brewer was "better." Somewhere along the way each of those things stopped being a limiting factor and went quiet. Not because the gear got better, but because my skill and understanding got deep enough that the equipment stopped getting in the way. I get specific about what changed: how one capable grinder like my K-Ultra now does everything I need, how coming back to Third Wave Water and playing with acidic and sweet profiles reshaped what I taste, and how a few months living with one brewer made the whole "which brewer" question feel small. If you listen, you'll learn how to tell whether you're still in the gear-acquisition phase or whether you've quietly moved past it, and why the goal was never mastering every tool but understanding enough that you can finally focus on the coffee itself. I also get honest about the trap I still fall into, losing sight of the joy and fascination under all the variables, and how I pull myself back. This one is for anyone who has wondered whether the next purchase will finally fix their cup, or who is starting to suspect that the answer was the coffee all along. I'd love to hear where you are in your own journey. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2412927/support] For good tasty coffee, check us out at: everydaybeans.com For tips, tricks and still trying to figure it out: https://www.youtube.com/@everyday-beans

23 de jun de 202615 min
episode Revisiting Coffee: A Year of Growth artwork

Revisiting Coffee: A Year of Growth

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2412927/fan_mail/new] In this episode, I'm doing something I've been looking forward to for a long time — coming back to six coffees I've already judged, brewed, and roasted before. I'm calling it the rematch. These are the exact same coffees: a Colombian medium, a Watermelon medium, a Honduras medium, an Ethiopian light roast white honey, a Honduras light roast, and a Java Nica from L'Kinzel Coffee Company out of Nicaragua. They've been sitting in the warehouse, some in vacuum-sealed bags, quietly aging while I've been out here sharpening my skills. The biggest question isn't whether the coffees changed. The biggest question is whether I have. I talk through what I remember about each coffee, what I'm hoping to find this time, and why I believe returning to familiar coffees is one of the most underrated tools a home brewer has. I also share a story about a Meyer lemon Colombian I ordered from a Seattle roaster years ago — a coffee that hit like a revelation the first time, then came back as a shadow of itself on the second order. That experience changed how I think about roasters, repeat purchases, and the expectations we bring to a cup. By listening to this episode, you'll understand why going back to a coffee you've already tried is one of the most honest tests of how much your palate and brewing knowledge have actually grown — and how to approach that rematch with curiosity instead of disappointment. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2412927/support] For good tasty coffee, check us out at: everydaybeans.com For tips, tricks and still trying to figure it out: https://www.youtube.com/@everyday-beans

18 de jun de 202619 min
episode Tasty but Wrong artwork

Tasty but Wrong

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2412927/fan_mail/new] In this episode, I share one of the most disorienting brewing experiences I've had in months. I made what the numbers said was one of the worst cups I could make, and I couldn't stop thinking about it. I tried a recipe from my own app using the Moccamaster, something I'd never really experimented with before. The app told me to do a bloom. I never do a bloom on the Moccamaster. So I wet the grounds, paused for 30 to 45 seconds, and let it run. When I poured that cup and took the first sip, it was bolder, livelier, and more interesting than what I usually make on that machine. Then I grabbed my TDS meter. The reading came back at 2.0. For context, the sweet spot for well-extracted coffee is somewhere between 1.2 and 1.5 TDS. At a 1:16 brew ratio, I was looking at somewhere around 24 to 25 percent extraction, well outside the accepted target range. By every measurement I trust, this cup should have tasted wrong. But it didn't. That tension is what this episode is about. I spent the rest of that morning thinking about comfort zones, constraints, failure, and what it means when the numbers say one thing and your palate says another. I talk about my ongoing failure challenge practice and what it keeps teaching me. I get into the logic of constraints and how deliberately stripping away variables forces you to see your coffee and your habits in a completely different light. By the end, I share something I wrote before recording this, a reflection on discomfort as a teacher. If you listen to this episode, you will walk away with a new way of thinking about what a "bad" cup actually is, and why deliberately breaking your own rules might be the most educational thing you can do as a home brewer. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2412927/support] For good tasty coffee, check us out at: everydaybeans.com For tips, tricks and still trying to figure it out: https://www.youtube.com/@everyday-beans

16 de jun de 202615 min
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Did the Gear Save This Coffee?

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2412927/fan_mail/new] In this episode, I share the story of an Ethiopian white honey processed coffee that had me ready to give up on it entirely. I kept it one-dimensional, flat, a single note of bright lemon acidity with a little chocolate on the finish. But instead of moving on to something new, I made a decision I don't usually make: I stayed with it for two weeks straight. I brewed it every way I could think of, across different brewers, different temperatures, different grind profiles, different experiments. Most of the time the results felt the same. But then I introduced a new brewer with a different bottom configuration, layered in the Sybaris Booster, and went back to the Melodrip I had talked badly about for weeks. And something shifted. The coffee came alive in a way I didn't recognize. What I learned from this experience goes beyond any single brew method or piece of gear. I started to realize that the tools I already own, the knowledge I had already built, and the simple act of staying with something long enough were doing more for my coffee than any new purchase could. I started to appreciate what was already on my shelf. You will hear me talk through whether the transformation was the gear, the coffee's natural maturation over time, or something that changed in me as a brewer. If you have ever given up on a coffee too early, questioned whether your current gear is enough, or wondered why the same beans can taste completely different weeks apart, this episode will give you a new way to think about patience, presence, and what it actually means to understand a coffee. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2412927/support] For good tasty coffee, check us out at: everydaybeans.com For tips, tricks and still trying to figure it out: https://www.youtube.com/@everyday-beans

11 de jun de 202614 min
episode The Brewer Is the Recipe artwork

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Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2412927/fan_mail/new] In this episode, I explore a question that seems simple on the surface but actually runs deeper than most coffee conversations go: what is a recipe, really? I walk through a recent experiment where I brewed the same coffee using three different methods — the Hario V60, a French press, and the AeroPress — with the same ratio, the same grind size, and the same water temperature. My goal was to keep every variable constant. What I discovered almost immediately is that I couldn't. Not really. Because the brewer itself is a variable. A significant one. And it's one we almost never talk about when we're chasing recipes online or dialing in a new coffee. I came to a realization mid-experiment that changed how I see the whole thing: the brewer is part of the recipe. The geometry, the mechanism, the brew process unique to each device — all of it shapes what ends up in your cup. You can't steep a V60 for four minutes the way you would a French press. You can't treat an AeroPress like either of them. These are different instruments, the same way a violin and a piano are different instruments. You might be playing the same song, but the approach has to change completely. By listening to this episode, you'll walk away with a clearer understanding of why mastering one or two brewers deeply will always outperform collecting many and mastering none, and why the brewer deserves more of your attention than any recipe you'll ever find online. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2412927/support] For good tasty coffee, check us out at: everydaybeans.com For tips, tricks and still trying to figure it out: https://www.youtube.com/@everyday-beans

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