What is a Pourover?

- Pouring jug
- Fresh light roasted coffee
- Glass or mug
- Filtered water if possible
- Kettle
- V60 or pourover cone
- Filter paper
- Grinder
- Using 15g light roast coffee, grind to sand-like coarseness
- Boil 265ml of water
- Preheat filter and cup by pouring boiling water through it (gets rid of papery taste as well)
- Place the ground coffee into the filter and ensure it all sits evenly and is settled
- When you water is boiled, pour straight away into your pouring jug (one with a nice thin spout for ease of direct pouring and to control the flow rate), you are aiming for the water to hit the coffee at 95 degrees, so move quickly. If you do not have a pouring vessel, then use your kettle, just try as hard as possible not to pour large chunks of water at a time, do your best
- Pour slowly into the middle of the grounds, just enough so that the whole coffee puck is wet. Stop your pour and wait 30 seconds. You will see it bubble up, this is important as it releases CO2 and allows the grounds to settle into a nice uniform distribution, ready for the full extraction
- Now pour the water in slow pours into and around the centre of the coffee bed, just enough so the water raises above the dry coffee line, stop your pour and wait for it to fall just below that line and start again. Repeat this till the 256ml of water runs out. If it doesn’t run out, then stop your extraction at 2.5 mins
- Allow to cool and presto, you have made a great pourover!!!!