jason01 said:If youre an espresso addict theres only one way to go, you need a mini mocha pot, these are widely available in outdoor shops. Mine gets used several times a day at home because it makes a perfect size double shot espresso for one and my other half dont like real coffee nothing else comes close, instant, filter, caffatiere...(except greek/turkish which is good too)
Mind you, Im quite fussy about using freshly ground beans of my preferred type but I havent yet resorted to carrying a grinder!
Heres a pic next to an old Primus for scale. My only complaint, its made of aluminium, would like a stainless one!
Martyn said:The only problem with fresh coffee in the field, is having it pre-ground. I find pre-ground coffee goes stale extremely quickly - 24 hours opened and it's tainted and tastes disgusting. At home, once I've opened my bag of beans, I keep the beans in a tupperware container in the freezer and grind them straight from frozen. They'll keep like this for months and every cup tastes like you're using freshly opened bag of beans. I suppose if your trip is only for a day or two, then you could get away with pre-grinding, but any longer and the coffee would go off for sure. I think for longer trips, the individually sealed coffee bags would be better.
BTW, Taylors Kenyan beans are delicious.
jason01 said:Anybody ever managed to sample Kopi Luwak? Also known as cat pooh coffee?
Allegedley this rare and expensive coffee from Indonesia attains an exceptional and uniquely smooth flavour from being eaten partially digested and then errrm poohed out by the paradoxurus, a tree-dwelling animal that is part of the sibet family. Long regarded by the natives as pests, they climb among the coffee trees eating only the ripest, reddest coffee cherries. The plantation workers collect the pooh and roast the bean which cost around $300 per pound!
For real!! Allegedley! ;-)
Jason
Gary said:I like a good strong coffee too - I usually carry ground coffee such as Java Lava or the swedish stuff sold by Ikea.
Trick here is to fill your billy with cold water and add one spoon of coffee gounds per cup plus one for luck - bring this to the boil and remove from the flame.
Now (and I know this sounds daft) tap the side of your billy 3 times then leave it for a mo.
All the grounds should sink to the bottom of the can so you can dip in your cup without stirring up the dregs at the bottom and then enjoy your strong coffee.
This is an ideal time to use a flexi-cup or a Kuksa by the way - unless you have a ladle I wouldnt think a metal mug would be much use.
Doc said:I like real (ie made from ground up coffee beans and hot water) coffee, especially in the morning. I know this is a bit of a luxury, but "any fool can be uncomfortable in the field" and I don't see any reason to deprive myself of it just because I'm out in the woods.
Interestingly Nessmuk devotes several pages to making coffee, so I'm not alone in this.
On the other hand - I don't want to carry a lot more kit, especially if heavy, bulky or easily broken, and I don't like bits of ground coffee floating in the cup.
Any tried and tested techniques?