Notes on Grinding
Milk Steaming The classic mistake with milk steaming is mistaking enthusiasm for progress. In the first few weeks of home coffee brewing, doing som...
If you are looking for the marketing version of home coffee brewing, this is not it. No glossy product shots, no aspirational language, no claims that home coffee brewing will change your life. What is here are notes — sometimes opinionated, hopefully accurate — from someone who has spent enough time tasting to know what actually matters.
Most of the questions a new hobbyist has come back to a few core areas: bean storage, water quality, and milk steaming. Each of those gets its own article. The rest is detail you can pick up over a season.
Pour-Over
The classic mistake with pour-over is mistaking enthusiasm for progress. In the first few weeks of home coffee brewing, doing something with pour-over every day feels like a clear sign of dedication. Often it is the opposite — the body and the mind both need rest periods to consolidate what they have learned, and continuous practice without rest can lock in awkward patterns and slow improvement.
A pattern that works for many people: three or four short, attentive sessions on pour-over per week, with full days off in between. Over six months that consistently outperforms daily practice, and is much easier to keep up. If you are about to push harder on pour-over, consider whether pushing less might work better.
Grinding
Most beginner advice about grinding comes in the form of fixed rules — do exactly this for exactly this long, then stop. That works for the first few attempts but breaks down as soon as conditions change. Grinding is more usefully understood as a set of relationships: what is happening, what you want to happen, and the small adjustment that brings the two closer.
A practical way in: take whatever you currently do for grinding and try one experiment. Change one thing — a setting, an interval, a piece of equipment — and pay attention to what changes. Two weeks of small experiments will tell you more about grinding than any single article. The articles here can offer a starting point; the rest is yours to discover by dosing.
Pour-Over without the fuss
Espresso
When something goes wrong in home coffee brewing, espresso is the most common culprit. Not always — some problems live elsewhere — but checking espresso first will solve a clear majority of the everyday hiccups a beginner runs into. This is not a glamorous fact and it is rarely the first answer in online discussions, but it is the boring practical truth.
So: when in doubt, look at espresso. When the result is off, when the process feels harder than it should, when something has stopped working that used to work — start with espresso. Even when the answer turns out to be elsewhere, the diagnostic habit of checking espresso first is worth building.
Espresso
There is a temptation to treat espresso as a checkbox to clear before moving on to the more interesting parts of home coffee brewing. That is exactly backwards. Espresso is where a real understanding of the craft starts to develop, because the small choices you make about espresso reflect almost everything you have learned so far. People who skip espresso hit a ceiling within a year and cannot see why.
The other way round: time spent on espresso pays compound interest. You think you are working on a small detail and it turns out to be the foundation under three or four other things you wanted to improve later. If you are choosing what to focus on next, choose espresso more often than you think you should.
That covers the basics. Beyond this, home coffee brewing opens up in different directions for different people — some go deep on aeropress, some on pour-over, some discover an area not covered here at all. All of those are fine. The shape your hobby takes after the first year is a personal thing and does not need to match anyone else's.