Everyday Beans Podcast - Mostly About Coffee and Other Stuff

The Myth of the One-Pour Brewer

16 min · 2. juni 2026
episode The Myth of the One-Pour Brewer cover

Beskrivelse

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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Alle episoder

306 Episoder

episode Why Every Recipe Is a Starting Point cover

Why Every Recipe Is a Starting Point

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2412927/fan_mail/new] I've never met a coffee lesson I could skip. Every recipe, every ratio, every borrowed technique had to be lived through before it meant anything. In this episode, I make the case for structure in coffee, and the case against clinging to it too long. I walk through how I leaned on other people's recipes when I started, from bloom timing to pour weights, and how that structure gave me a sense that I was doing it right even before I understood why. I also tell the story of my first attempt at brisket, following a top restaurant's method step by step, only to end up with something that tasted nothing like theirs, and what that taught me about the invisible variables experts never mention. By the end of this one, you'll understand why structure is a starting place and not a destination, why the guru who taught you a ratio was never wrong, and why the goal is to eventually build your own guardrails instead of living inside someone else's. I share what happened when I asked my audience how they actually brew their coffee, and why the wild variety of answers was the most reassuring thing I've heard in a while. If you've ever felt guilty for deviating from a recipe, or frustrated that you can't replicate someone else's cup, this episode is for you. 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

7. juli 202613 min
episode What the Dino Rib Taught Me About Coffee cover

What the Dino Rib Taught Me About Coffee

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2412927/fan_mail/new] In this episode I tell the story of smoking dino beef ribs on a brand new Weber kettle with no thermometer anywhere in sight, and how that one decision completely reframed how I think about brewing coffee. I share why not knowing the temperature actually made me feel good, and how I realized it was not really about the thermometer at all. I had simply started to trust myself more. From there I connect it straight to specialty coffee, where so many of us lean on our scale, our TDS meter, our water temperature, our brew ratio, and our drawdown timing to chase the perfect cup. I talk about how we start out loose and free when we know less, then slowly become rigid and anal about every number as our journey continues. I also get into how I have been brewing the same lightly roasted Ethiopian white honey at random doses, sometimes 10 grams, sometimes 30, sometimes 12, without obsessing over the measurements, and what happened when the coffee kept tasting essentially the same. By listening to this episode you will learn how to recognize when your brewing has quietly become rigid, why slowing down and paying attention can matter more than chasing numbers, and how to find more freedom and honesty in your coffee ritual without ever throwing your gear away. If you are a home brewer who feels stuck inside your own spreadsheet, this one is for you. 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

2. juli 202613 min
episode The Coffee Lesson No App Can Teach cover

The Coffee Lesson No App Can Teach

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2412927/fan_mail/new] A couple of months ago, I set out to build a coffee app called Brew Outside the Box. The idea was simple: an AI companion you could talk to while you brewed, something that would answer your questions and guide you through what was happening in the cup. I even reshaped it into a failure challenge, a way to push people out of their comfort zone without buying any new gear. But the more I worked on it, the more I kept hitting the same wall. The coffee didn't care about my game. And eventually I realized the app couldn't teach the one thing that actually matters, which is the experience of going through it yourself. In this episode, I walk through why I stopped building the app and what the whole failure taught me about learning coffee. I talk about why an app can't taste, why naming a coffee "a Colombian" tells you almost nothing, and why the real teacher is just brewing a cup, paying attention, and asking better questions. By listening, you'll learn how to develop your own palate and your own recipe through trial and error, and why treating failure as feedback is the fastest honest path to better coffee. If you've ever wished there was a shortcut to good coffee, this one is for you. 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

30. juni 202617 min
episode What I Stopped Tracking in My Coffee cover

What I Stopped Tracking in My Coffee

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2412927/fan_mail/new] There's stuff in coffee I stopped tracking, and it wasn't because I got lazy. It's because it stopped mattering. In this episode I sit down with the things I quietly subtracted from my routine over the years and ask myself whether they were ever as critical as they felt. I talk through why elevation, varietal, and processing matter to me but never decide which coffee I reach for, why my Melodrip and drip assist mostly live on the bar until I want consistency for a recipe, and why the real "filter trap" isn't the paper itself but the psychology of thinking you need every option on the market. I keep coming back to the same idea: when you subtract a variable from your mind, you don't lose control of your coffee, you get a kind of freedom that makes you more present with the cup in front of you. By the end, you'll understand how an experienced home brewer and roaster decides what actually moves the cup versus what's just part of the dance, and you'll have a simple framework for spotting the gear and habits you can let go of. I get into the few things you genuinely can't subtract, the brewer, the water, and the coffee, and why letting the rest fall away might be the thing that makes you a better brewer. If you've ever felt buried under variables, filters, and gadgets, this one is about doing less on purpose and trusting your own routine. 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

25. juni 202617 min
episode When the Gear Finally Goes Quiet cover

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. juni 202615 min