But I burned some sage, said a little prayer, and it again made a perfect cup of Sumatra, which I got from @peter4jc

Or... you could just use good coffee and brew it properly... Haha... just sayin'.Hawkeye said:I have been really enjoying cold brew lately, much smoother than what I am normally drinking (drip/french press/Ninja brewer when in a rush). My wife thinks I am weird for wanting cold brew when it is near 0 degrees out
The big-brand coffees like Foal-Turds have a good percentage of robusta (a type of coffee as opposed to arabica) in them. Robusta has a higher yield per plant and is more disease-resistant, so it's well-suited for coffees for the masses that don't know what good coffee is like. Robusta generally has a sharp, chemical, sometimes a burnt rubber flavor, and that's most likely what you're tasting.GaryThompson said:Wifey said "My Dad drinks Folgers and I saw it was on sale...." This stuff still has that weird, "sharp" or odd "chemical" taste the regular Folgers has.
Well show me the light coffee man! I have been going back and forth between BRCC and Costco Single Origin beans lately, burr grind by hand right before brew. If anything maybe could use better water, but tap is all I use, has decent mineral comp where I live.peter4jc said:Or... you could just use good coffee and brew it properly... Haha... just sayin'.Hawkeye said:I have been really enjoying cold brew lately, much smoother than what I am normally drinking (drip/french press/Ninja brewer when in a rush). My wife thinks I am weird for wanting cold brew when it is near 0 degrees out
One of the problems people seem to ignore is the proper storage of beans. It is bad enough I can't get my wife to understand the ground coffee should be in an airtight container, and that she should not grind more then she will use in the next couple of days. I got a great little burr grinder from the coffee bully @peter4jc , how long does it take to grind some beans. I have actually trashed what she had in the container she uses because it was so stale, and literally had no coffee aroma at all. I store my beans in a sealed airtight bag, in a drawer that gets no light or extreme temp variations. It works for me. If there is a better way I would love to hear about it. I have never had beans go bad on me.peter4jc said:I would show you the light, but don't want to be here to sell coffee. But I'd bet dollars to donuts that either one of those coffees mentioned isn't actually specialty-grade coffee and was already stale by the time it reached the store, let alone by the time you bought it. Top-notch coffee, roasted properly and consumed before it stales (like 2 weeks, 3 at the most) is the way to go.
We can teach you how to roast your own coffee. Or, we can let some other forum members chime in that you need to send me a PM.
In fact, Patrick is driving all the way to MKE, an hour and a half, to pick up coffee next week. @avengethis is dring 2 hours the same day, to pick up his beans.Patrickbrick said:I was shown the coffee light and have not looked back towards the darkness since. Crazy difference.