Re: blind friendly coffee makers
Well one of our educators in our group showed me today how to make the coffee with a normal coffee maker, which takes between 5-10 minutes to cook the coffee.URL: http://forum.audiogames.net/viewtopic.php?pid=149227#p149227
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Re: blind friendly coffee makers
Hi dark and all.Oh man that really does put me to shame then.I have only liked milky instant coffees.I have had black instant, and hated it.I however have had a good ground coffee in a cafe which was freshly roasted and ground that was a moka but the coffee was
Re: blind friendly coffee makers
Coffee and tea ae certainly the two most popular beverages to be consumed.I've used a coffee maker, a simple one with Green Mountain and some sugar in it. I've tried Dark Roasted coffee with a K-Cup and a Keurig machine and without sugar it tasted just fine. I'm
Re: blind friendly coffee makers
Well my preferences haven't changed, indeed Casta I personally find the overblown coffees with cream, steamed milk etc just far too sweet and not really too much like coffee. this is likely why you found Moka sweet sean, since Moka is usually a mix of chocolate
Re: blind friendly coffee makers
I love my coffee black. Every now and then, i will drink a sweeter Starbucks, but this is rare. I enjoy trying coffee from different regions, south america and African coffee come to mind. I have tryed some of the island coffees like kona and Blue Mountain but,
Re: blind friendly coffee makers
I agree on island coffees, the bluemountain to me is a little overrated, though then again I don't tend to like mild coffees anyway. I find myself your best off going by country rather than continent, since after all south america and africa are both pretty huge
Re: blind friendly coffee makers
Hi dark and all.This reminds me of a program I listend to last year on radio.the particular dj in question name station I won't mention for embarasment reasons, was used to drinking his colombian coffee and was happy to drink all sorts of coffee he is also a cof
Re: blind friendly coffee makers
Just one word, Tassimo. Okay, it is a capsule system, but its the best in price and quality, and it has a huge variety of drinks, including tea, cofee and chocolate, thie last one is not so good...URL: http://forum.audiogames.net/viewtopic.php?pid=149312#p149312
Re: blind friendly coffee makers
try the dulce gusta. It needs coffee pods which contain the powders for whatever sort of coffee you want, ie peach tea, esspresso, lungo. Very easy to use, just put in the pod, fill up the water container, push down the lever on top, and use the lever at the bac
Re: blind friendly coffee makers
Again, I'm not a fan of those automated monsters, especially something that uses it's own prefabricated servings, too plastic and too corporate for my liking, I prefer the personal touch you can only get with doing the thing yourself, indeed since often those pr
Re: blind friendly coffee makers
Of course, there is nothing like home-made coffee, but some capsule systems offer a better quality than the american coffee. I'm sorry, but U.S people have two horrible things, coffee and beer URL: http://forum.audiogames.net/viewtopic.php?pid=149353#p149353
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Re: blind friendly coffee makers
I can't speak for beer, but coffee is the same over here in Britain. There are far too many very horrible instant brands which are just not nice. nevertheless, even some supermarkits now are stocking ground coffee, and Wittards where I get my beans and where I a
Re: blind friendly coffee makers
The only coffee I drink that isn't instant is Turkish. So, both extremes of the spectrum. Obviously no coffee maker is going to brew you decent Turkish coffee, but since it takes half an hour or so to get the grounds to percolate sufficiently to make drinking it
Re: blind friendly coffee makers
Dark,I suspect your approximately 97 degrees, is C instead of F.97 degrees C is just under the 100 degrees C of boiling while 97 degrees F is a little below body temperature.I use an electric coffee machine from Kitchen Aid, and I suspect since the 100 degrees
Re: blind friendly coffee makers
DocumentURL: http://forum.audiogames.net/viewtopic.php?pid=149383#p149383
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Re: blind friendly coffee makers
@Phil, yes 97 degrees was celsius, not Fahrenheit. Unfortunately as I understand it, pressure can have as much affect on that given protein molicule as heat, one reason why the pasturisation process in milk these days involves high pressure sinse part of pasturi
Re: blind friendly coffee makers
@Dark: yes, Turkish coffee is often quite sweet too, as I imagine similar eastern cultures, to soften the blow somewhat. Though I personally think the gritty nature of Turkish coffee is really its own reward, I can see how some people don't.You don't really need
Re: blind friendly coffee makers
Well I tried the turkish Coffee when I was in Kemer, near Antalya, Turkey. It just tastes different than the coffee I tried, but it's just delicious! I come to Istanbul in the automn holidays, so hopefully I will be able to taste it again. It's just amazing! I
Re: blind friendly coffee makers
@Sebby, interesting. When you said "perculator" I assumed you meant the method where a sheet of porus filter paper is made into a cone shape and the boiling water is poured through it, interesting thinking of making coffee with just the grounds. I suspect the am
Re: blind friendly coffee makers
@Dark, I think the primary contributor to the taste of Turkish coffee is simply the extraction process and the amounts of coffee used--about a teaspoon per quarter cup. Remember that most servings of Turkish coffee are about a quarter of a typical English tea se
Re: blind friendly coffee makers
Hi.Having just read mostly the whole topic, I have a few questions. Why not just use a normal standard coffee machine? Why kook the water manually and make coffee the old way, or why use the automated coffee machines which makes one cup just by pressing a button
Re: blind friendly coffee makers
@Sebby, while I can't be certain it sounds a lot like the servings and strength of the Tirkish coffee you mention is similar to the way my Italian teacher serves it, indeed I believe the cups we had in Egypt were a similar size, likely judging at the strength, p
Re: blind friendly coffee makers
@Dark: Thanks much for your reply.[[wow]], I'm a bit surprised that the coffee machines I'm thinking about aren't used more in the different countries. Yes, I'm thinking about the machine you have heard about,Quote:I have heard of some coffee machines which basi
Re: blind friendly coffee makers
Well SLJ, we simply call them coffee makers here in America, or electric coffee makers. They are very popular here, so much so that if you suggested making traditional coffee, people here would probably say why bother? I have an electric one at home. Some coffee
Re: blind friendly coffee makers
Ah, interesting. Thanks for your comment. URL: http://forum.audiogames.net/viewtopic.php?pid=149487#p149487
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Re: blind friendly coffee makers
I never knew coffee machines were so popular in denmark slj. It sounds like the machines basically do a similar thing to the cafetiere I use just with a pump, though I'm not sure since it all depends upon the heat and pressure of the water, and some machines I'v
Re: blind friendly coffee makers
I never knew coffee machines were so popular in denmark slj. It sounds like the machines basically do a similar thing to the cafetiere I use just with a pump, though I'm not sure since it all depends upon the heat and pressure of the water, and some machines I'v
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