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131 lines
9.9 KiB
Plaintext
131 lines
9.9 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2440
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Title: HPR2440: How to save bad beans or the French press
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2440/hpr2440.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 03:06:44
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---
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This is HPR episode 2,440 entitled How to Save Bad Beans on a French Press and in part
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on the series Coffee, it is hosted by Cobra II and is about one minute long and carries
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an exquisite flag.
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The summary is How to Hush and Coffee.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by archive.org.
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Support universal access to all knowledge by heading over to archive.org forward slash
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Donate.
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Before we get to the day show, I'd like to play you this memorial sent in yesterday
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on December 7th by Claudio M.
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Hey Hacker Public Radio, this is Claudio M. Claudio Miranda.
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I just want to record a little episode here.
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I'm not sure if many of you remember, but well a good old friend of many people here on
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HPR, Matthew Williams, Lord Drachem Bluth, passed away last year and as I recorded this
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December 7th, 2017, this marks one year since his passing.
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So I've just been thinking about him today and thinking about how quickly time passes
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by when those that we love and those that we care about pass away and you look back and
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you just can't believe how fast the time has gone by.
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And interestingly enough, I went through another situation recently when my mother passed
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away on September 28th, so it's been, was difficult for us, especially for my dad still
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is a little bit, but you know we're healing, we've grieved, we're moving on, but we just
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can't, can't believe how quickly the time passes by, it's already been two months and soon
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enough it'll be three months and before we know it, it's going to be a year.
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This is it is today marking Lord Drachem Bluth's death.
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Just want to make a call to everyone out there, please remember him, think about him, think
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about the memories you've had with him, all the things that you've done with him if you've
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met him in person or if you've interacted with him in any way, just take a time out just
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to think about him and honor his memory.
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Thanks, bye bye.
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Now it's my table, I'm able to get out of here.
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Hello HBR, this is Cobra 2, you'll have to excuse the audio quality as I'm not sure
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how well this recording is going to go, it's just kind of a test, I'm driving around
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in the middle of nowhere, heading back from picking up some lobster, anyways I figured
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I'd talk a little bit about some coffee as I'm driving and just kind of wanted to go
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over, you know, how you get good coffee from bad coffee beans.
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So if you just out and around and in just your everyday grocery store and you're a hanker
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and person coffee but the beans selection is pretty slim to none so you go and get one
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of those cans of already cream ground vacuum sealed for consumption, you're just your
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everyday average drip coffee pot maker so you've got some grounds that are coarse ground
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but they're ground for, I believe it's extra fine, you see they're fine or extra fine and
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that's typically what you'll find in most modern day drip coffee makers that's just kind
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of grounds to use, anyways, so you pick up just all say the national brand, I'm not
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going to list off any brands, void Maxwell House in the U.S. it tastes like shit, anyways
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so you pick up the national brand at coffee or whatever it is, and you go run along
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and you're just kind of wondering how do I make this coffee taste good, it's going to be,
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it's going to have most of its flavor already gone because it's already been ground before
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I go to make my coffee, so what, how can I salvage this, well my friends the answer is the
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French press, you go get yourself just a cheap French press, you get ones they have glass
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beakers they have plastic beakers, and buddy let me tell you what French press, you can
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make almost any coffee taste decent, you might have to use three times as much as you normally
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would and with a freshly ground coffee bean, but hey what the heck, you're still saving
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a little bit of money by buying the name brand, you know, three package bullshit, right?
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Well anyways, I kind of need to go into how French press actually works, so what a French
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press does is the idea is to get a take water that is almost boiling, I think it's 205
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degrees Fahrenheit, and my Celsius is horrible, so that's roughly 93, 95, some of you folks
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that are more familiar with Celsius will have to correct me in the comments, or help,
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just send me an email, but you take your almost boiling water but not boiling water, you
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get that on the stove, get it all heated up and ready to go, how do you heat your water,
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you measure out your coffee grounds, and you're going to have to try this five or six times
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to get your measurement right for the strength of coffee that you like.
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I have a 21 ounce French, excuse me, I have a 32 ounce French press, I fill it up with
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about 30 ounces of water to make a coffee cup for me for the day, I don't drink as much
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as I used to, and I use five, I think I use five tablespoons of coffee for my 30 ounce
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coffee of the cheapo, run of the mail, whatever it is, if I'm using fresh ground, I only use
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three and a half tablespoons, so that's kind of the difference for the, get the strength
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of the coffee flavor that I like, we're in between fresh and, you know, already ground
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vacuum seal, PS, so anyways, you get back to how the French press works, I kind of talk
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in circles around myself, so you take your water, you pour it, you get your water
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heating, then you take your coffee, you put your coffee into the bottom of your French press,
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and then you take your almost boiling water and you slowly pour it into the coffee grounds,
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as your reason you want to slowly pour it in is because you want to gradually immerse
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the coffee grounds with water, and then after you pour it in all the water, you'll just
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get a spoon or something, have a fork works, a straw, whatever you can grab, some sort
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of stirring utensils, and just stir the coffee grounds around in the French press for about
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15 to 30 seconds or so, what you're looking for is you're looking for a nice thick head
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to form, on the top of the, on the top of the water, you get coffee head, man, it's awesome.
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When you see the coffee head starting to form, you should just get a solid layer in the
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thicker your coffee head, the better your coffee is going to be in my experience, so after
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you get your coffee poured, after you got it all stirred, after you've watched your coffee
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head, sticky nose down there, it just deeply inhale and savor all the aromas of that fresh,
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fresh coffee smell, it is absolutely delicious, you'll amount this water and just sit in
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here thinking about it, and think if you're going to have to go home and make me a golf
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deal my way down, so after you've stirred it, you take your lid to your French press, which
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has plunger with a filter on the end of it, and you just put the lid on top of the
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beaker and set a timer for four minutes to four minutes and 30 seconds somewhere around
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there, and that's your brew time for your coffee, after your timer goes off, you take the plunger
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and slowly push the plunger all the way down, if you take the lid off before you do this,
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you'll see that all the coffee grounds have risen to the top and have started to kind
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of just get completely saturated with water, well not completely saturated, but the boils
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have leached out of the coffee grounds, and water has gone into replace them, so what
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you're going to try and do is basically use that filter that's on top, that's on the
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end of the plunger there, and you're going to force the coffee grounds that are floating
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below the surface of the water, and that's going to force out any remaining coffee boils,
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anything that's left in the bean, that's going to force it out into the coffee, into
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the water, and it's going to make your coffee more delicious, and if you were to just
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pour it straight out, my mistake was, I thought it was originally there to just filter the
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coffee as you're pouring it in, so the first couple of times you use a French press
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in it or push the plunger all the way down, by loss, so when you force it down, you are
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pushing the coffee grounds into the water, you're forcing water to run in between all
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of the coffee grounds, you're forcing water into the coffee grounds, and at the same time
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you're forcing it out, just kind of basically like a, it's almost like taking the coffee
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grounds, throwing them in a towel, and just kind of bringing them out into the house under
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water, that's basically what you're doing, you are bringing the coffee out of the beans,
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with this stuff, so after you do that, you just pour it into your favorite mug, serve
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yourself a nice hot piping cup, a joke, and that's pretty much all I get for today,
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a half dollar hack of public radio listeners, enjoy yourselves, go home, make yourself a nice
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hot piping cup of coffee, and a nice new French press, go out again, go find one at a
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cup, pick a thrift store, because it's a whole lot cheaper than trying to pile on new,
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you should talk to your class too as to whether you want to get a class or a plastic one,
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I think he prefers a plastic model, so I've had my glass French press for, oh jeez, probably
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eight years in, and I've used it every day, so it's worth every single penny that you
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have lost and spend into it, all right, have a good day folks, we'll talk to you next
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time, this is Hack or Public Radio, cover to signing off.
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