Coffee Set Ups

@Uniquely Us Adventures I keep those little pre-made pour overs and my jet boil in my truck all winter. They are great to make a quick cup of coffee on the road.

Nice, they certainly are handy for a quick cup!
We also found a really good mix from a company called Heritage 1857.
They make a bagged instant Vietnamese coffee that is excellent. It has all the stuff already in it to make a cup of Vietnamese coffee including the cream. It’s a little expensive but it’s a nice treat. We saw them at Expo PNW this year and picked up a few bags.
 
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Nice, they certainly are handy for a quick cup!
We also found a really good mix from a company called Heritage 1857.
They make a bagged instant Vietnamese coffee that is excellent. It has all the stuff already in it to make a cup of Vietnamese coffee including the cream. It’s a little expensive but it’s a nice treat. We saw them at Expo PNW this year and picked up a few bags.

I am going to have to check them out! Would be cool if they are at the May expo next year.
 
id say coffee is a lot like beer/liquor...you either drink it for the taste OR you drink it for the effect...



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I have settled on instant Starbucks cans over the last while but have upgraded my AeroPress with the flow control and just picked up the Oxo manual coffee maker to give that a try. My biggest issue for the AP and probably the Oxo is one cup at a time and having to take a grinder and beans (or pre-grind at home first). We shall see
 
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I have settled on instant Starbucks cans over the last while but have upgraded my AeroPress with the flow control and just picked up the Oxo manual coffee maker to give that a try. My biggest issue for the AP and probably the Oxo is one cup at a time and having to take a grinder and beans (or pre-grind at home first). We shall see

I’m using the same setups - Starbucks instant, which has become expensive and is now rarely on sale; and an Aeropress Go kit. I wasn’t aware of the flow control cap, which looks like a nice improvement. Thanks for the tip! The Go doesn’t make a full cup of coffee, but I refill the water and do a second squeeze of the same coffee grounds. It makes a nice cuppa and is easier to clean than my regular French press.
 
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I'm a big fan of the french press or instant coffee. But recently when I trained some scouts in first aid, one of their supervisors had an AeroPress. Man, that was one of the best coffees I've ever had. I could definitely see myself getting an AeroPress for my overlanding kitchen setup.
 
I am sold on this coffee! 27 cups per container, cents on the dollar, it’s flavorful, and strong!!!
 

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I am sold on this coffee! 27 cups per container, cents on the dollar, it’s flavorful, and strong!!!

Ohhhh... Just added this to my shopping list. My Grandfather would have been skeptical of 'espresso' vs his Sanka or Tasters Choice, but I'm down to try it. :)
 
Just got back on this site and didn't want to re-read all 37 pages to see if this has been posted by someone else...so here goes. I cold brew about 2 gallons of coffee and then freeze dry it. I just completed a 49 day x-country trip and I had enough coffee to get started on many days. It was a lot less expensive than purchasing freeze dried coffee from the store and it tasted much better...if you don't count the cost of the freeze drier.
 
As a follow up the OXO Rapid Brew is awesome. Easy to use and makes great coffee. The concentrate is enough for two cups. If you choose the OXO Outdoor version it comes with a case as well.
 
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Just got back on this site and didn't want to re-read all 37 pages to see if this has been posted by someone else...so here goes. I cold brew about 2 gallons of coffee and then freeze dry it. I just completed a 49 day x-country trip and I had enough coffee to get started on many days. It was a lot less expensive than purchasing freeze dried coffee from the store and it tasted much better...if you don't count the cost of the freeze drier.
I am glad I didn't have to read 37 pages to read about this technique. That's awesome.
 
As a follow up the OXO Rapid Brew is awesome. Easy to use and makes great coffee. The concentrate is enough for two cups. If you choose the OXO Outdoor version it comes with a case as well.
Makes me want to run an Aeropress vs OXO test. I used to use an Aeropress for all my coffee both home and on the road.
 
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Just got back on this site and didn't want to re-read all 37 pages to see if this has been posted by someone else...so here goes. I cold brew about 2 gallons of coffee and then freeze dry it. I just completed a 49 day x-country trip and I had enough coffee to get started on many days. It was a lot less expensive than purchasing freeze dried coffee from the store and it tasted much better...if you don't count the cost of the freeze drier.
glad you posted this...I actually thought about doing that and I was wondering if I brew it regular strength or brew it very strong so that I don't have as much water to remove.
do you get actual crystals like Nescafe or do you get a dried film like when freeze drying a broth?
 
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Just got back on this site and didn't want to re-read all 37 pages to see if this has been posted by someone else...so here goes. I cold brew about 2 gallons of coffee and then freeze dry it. I just completed a 49 day x-country trip and I had enough coffee to get started on many days. It was a lot less expensive than purchasing freeze dried coffee from the store and it tasted much better...if you don't count the cost of the freeze drier.
Maybe this is a dumb question, or maybe I'm just missing some detail, but what's the advantage of doing this vs just carrying coffee grinds and making coffee every morning? If it's freeze dried, don't you have to add water anyway?

Sorry if I'm clued out, but I'm not getting the idea here.
 
Maybe this is a dumb question, or maybe I'm just missing some detail, but what's the advantage of doing this vs just carrying coffee grinds and making coffee every morning? If it's freeze dried, don't you have to add water anyway?

Sorry if I'm clued out, but I'm not getting the idea here.
a lot of people drink instant coffee for the convenience...all you need is hot water and a cup. the higher quality instant coffees are freeze dried because freeze drying preserves a lot of nutrients, antioxidants and flavor compared to "spray drying" where the coffee is essentially brewed and evaporated. freeze drying uses a vacuum and heat to remove water thru sublimation...going directly from frozen solid to a gas. a lot of the better and more expensive instant coffees will say on the package 'freeze dried'.

@Jhop567 has his reasons for doing it and I'm interested in it because of the taste. my wife is a bit picky on coffee and we found a few brands that are really good and are even better when cold brewed. it is a much milder, less bitter and overall better tasting coffee when cold brewed versus hot brewed. I also have a couple freeze dryers, so why not freeze dry coffee? I can buy instant that doesn't taste too good or I can make my own. freeze dried coffee (instant coffee) is just really for convenience. if im backpacking, I like just taking a lightweight pouch of instant coffee versus a bag of beans, coffee grinder, coffee maker of some sort, etc.

IMHO, a good coffee that is cold brewed tastes better and is even easier on the stomach and freeze drying that coffee is just an easy way to take it out in the boonies to enjoy. I haven't done it yet, but hoping that if I take cold brew coffee and freeze dry it, I can get that same flavor profile in a hot cup. we also take a 64oz mason jar with the cold brew strainer in it on trips where we can do cold brew overnight in the 12v fridge. for me, its just fun stuff to play around with and something the wife and I do together

don't know if you've tried cold brew coffee, but it is easy to do. Walmart carried the mesh strainer that fits in a mason jar for $8. stick the strainer in the jar full of water and then add ground coffee in the strainer and twist the lid on and stick in the fridge. open it in the morning and you have a very nice coffee

and @CR-Venturer ...one of our favorite cold brew coffees is Tim Hortons. discovered Tim Hortons working out of Halifax years back...WAY better place than Starbucks

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Maybe this is a dumb question, or maybe I'm just missing some detail, but what's the advantage of doing this vs just carrying coffee grinds and making coffee every morning? If it's freeze dried, don't you have to add water anyway?

Sorry if I'm clued out, but I'm not getting the idea here.
a lot of people drink instant coffee for the convenience...all you need is hot water and a cup. the higher quality instant coffees are freeze dried because freeze drying preserves a lot of nutrients, antioxidants and flavor compared to "spray drying" where the coffee is essentially brewed and evaporated. freeze drying uses a vacuum and heat to remove water thru sublimation...going directly from frozen solid to a gas. a lot of the better and more expensive instant coffees will say on the package 'freeze dried'.

@Jhop567 has his reasons for doing it and I'm interested in it because of the taste. my wife is a bit picky on coffee and we found a few brands that are really good and are even better when cold brewed. it is a much milder, less bitter and overall better tasting coffee when cold brewed versus hot brewed. I also have a couple freeze dryers, so why not freeze dry coffee? I can buy instant that doesn't taste too good or I can make my own. freeze dried coffee (instant coffee) is just really for convenience. if im backpacking, I like just taking a lightweight pouch of instant coffee versus a bag of beans, coffee grinder, coffee maker of some sort, etc.

IMHO, a good coffee that is cold brewed tastes better and is even easier on the stomach and freeze drying that coffee is just an easy way to take it out in the boonies to enjoy. I haven't done it yet, but hoping that if I take cold brew coffee and freeze dry it, I can get that same flavor profile in a hot cup. we also take a 64oz mason jar with the cold brew strainer in it on trips where we can do cold brew overnight in the 12v fridge. for me, its just fun stuff to play around with and something the wife and I do together

don't know if you've tried cold brew coffee, but it is easy to do. Walmart carried the mesh strainer that fits in a mason jar for $8. stick the strainer in the jar full of water and then add ground coffee in the strainer and twist the lid on and stick in the fridge. open it in the morning and you have a very nice coffee

and @CR-Venturer ...one of our favorite cold brew coffees is Tim Hortons. discovered Tim Hortons working out of Halifax years back...WAY better place than Starbucks

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Ahhhh, so basically making your own instant coffee! Thank you for enlightening me :D Learning something new every day.

Yes, Timmies makes a pretty good cuppa. I hate starbucks, personally, always tastes burnt to me.

My personal thing is just coffee grounds with a collapsible silicone pour over and a filter. Easy clean up and it's pretty easy with the kettle. For sure instant coffee is that little bit easier and faster though.

Making instant coffee even better is a win, I would say.
 
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I have and was using a large French Press for the wife and myself, clean up sucked, used a fair amount of water to clean, but now we use a pour over, it is so darn nice and easy to clean, the holder collapses, toss filter in trash, bam done. Love it.....

Toss in some great coffee which I store in one of those containers we had in the store here (Excellent at keeping fresh!), I do not see them anymore sadly.

Jim
 
I have and was using a large French Press for the wife and myself
a good french press is hard to beat. I bought the aero press years back and we broke it relatively quick...bought a pour-over (glass) and of course it didn't make it very long. I did buy a Frieling stainless french press back in the 90s when I was on offshore oil rigs and we use it exclusively now traveling. nearly 30 years of use and just last month I bought a rebuild kit for it which now has 2 screens instead of just the one. it was pricey even back then...but it is built like an absolute tank and even my wife cant destroy it! :grinning:

anyone looking for a French press that can withstand a nuclear blast...this is it

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