Green Coffee Buying Club
Coffee Discussion boards => Hardware & Equipment => Topic started by: Tex on April 06, 2012, 09:43:34 AM
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Back in the day I used a one-cup moka pot for my coffee needs, but my nieces son & wife are serious coffee drinkers & backpackers who limit their pack load to no more than 35 lbs each (pretty light when they're often gone for a week or more). I gave them a small hand grinder that packs away OK, but they want a pour over that's not made of plastic & is as light as possible.
So far I've come up with these;
(http://www.gsioutdoors.com/resources/images/cache/pdp/resources/images/product_images/79460_h1_g-486x376.jpg)(http://www.ortliebusa.com/cartgenie/images/large/CoffeeFilter.gif)
Any other options for a "real" pour over cone that'll collapse?
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I like mine
(http://)
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I like mine
(http://)
RSVP, +1
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Here's a stainless one that's less than 6 oz, but I don't like it as much as a simple wire frame. Cost too dang gone much too. (click on image for link)
([url]http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41PJBm7WSBL._SL500_AA300_.jpg[/url]) ([url]http://www.amazon.com/Snow-Peak-Fold-Coffee-Dripper/dp/B000AR2OZ2[/url])
p.s. Reviews call this heavy.
Too bad they didn't make it from aluminum!
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Does the RSVP pass the spirit of the "not plastic" test?
Not just a cone, silicone! ( yech? )
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Back in my backpacking day's my cookpot was a coffee pot. I brewed the coffee cowboy style with it in the morning and cooked dinner in it at night (I ate out of it, too). Why make things more complicated than it needs to be?
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Back in my backpacking day's my cookpot was a coffee pot. I brewed the coffee cowboy style with it in the morning and cooked dinner in it at night (I ate out of it, too). Why make things more complicated than it needs to be?
Why intentionally make bad coffee when there are better options? I used to lug something like this for years (but I was using preground Italian coffee).
(http://www.gsioutdoors.com/resources/images/cache/pdp/resources/images/product_images/55101_h1_g-486x376.jpg)
Good coffee is my birthright!
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Yeah, I've got one of those in the tent trailer.
What are they going to use to roast the coffee while backpacking?
I don't know, but if you left a can of greens out and collected it the next day would you have ursa luwak?
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In a case like ultra light unsupported backpacking I'd accept pre grinding into some vac sealed packs to lose the grinder. I'd use the jet boil and probably get a lexan press pot rather than pourover cone and filters.
Ultra light packing does not mesh perfectly with fresh ground coffee plus brewing gear. Compromise is mandatory.
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Right now they're using a Hario Mini grinder w/o the catcher (broken) and a Melitta pour over. They've broken several plastic cones and want something that can take the beating of getting tossed down a cliff while they rappel down.
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(http://www.rei.com/media/ss/69c31ef1-cc76-4571-a655-0206e99ca36a.jpg)
http://www.rei.com/product/750397/gsi-outdoors-h2jo-coffee-filter (http://www.rei.com/product/750397/gsi-outdoors-h2jo-coffee-filter)
This is what I do. I dump the coffee into the filter and screw it into a Nalgene bottle that I have filled with water just off the boil. I screw on the cap, invert the bottle and wait about five minutes, shaking the bottle periodically. Open the bottle, remove and dump out the filter and I have a quart bottle full of good, hot coffee. More compact and less fussy than the drip filters, or the french press for the Nalgene bottle that I used to use.
PS: I forgot to mention that after I clean the filter and bottle, I install the filter back into the bottle and fill it up with water to drink on the trail. This way, the filter takes up no extra room in my pack and is protected from damage. Even though I usually use a hydration bladder in my packs, I usually take one Nalgene with me as well. Easier to hand a bottle to people who have run out of water, or if I need to filter/treat water on the trail.
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Does the RSVP pass the spirit of the "not plastic" test?
Not just a cone, silicone! ( yech? )
It's fine just don't implant it anywhere ;D
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There is always this:
(http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/617ISGCkeFL._AA1000_.jpg) (http://www.amazon.com/ABID-CO-LTD-C-70888-Dripper/dp/B0047W70GY)
Whether it is light enough or cheap enough is your call.
:)
(Click on image for link.)
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You could get them a Vietnamese phin to use for pourover. It might not be completely perfect, but they are cheap and made of metal.
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You could get them a Vietnamese phin to use for pourover. It might not be completely perfect, but they are cheap and made of metal.
Cheap & made of aluminum is good, but it has to be something that's easy stowed in a small rucksack. I'll stop by REI on Monday and see what they have.
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If they already have a Jet Boil there is a french press style screen insert you can buy them for it and that would be the lightest option. I assume you could unscrew the pole too, which would make it very small and able to fit anywhere in a pack. http://shop.jetboil.com/index.php/coffee-press.html (http://shop.jetboil.com/index.php/coffee-press.html)
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I may get them this (http://www.rei.com/product/708069/snow-peak-titanium-french-press-3-cup) from REI. The JetBoil was aluminum and I hate drinking coffee from aluminum.