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AeroPress for faster filtering?

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grollum

Rising Star
I just finished another extraction and was really frustrated about the time which is needed for all the coffee-filter filtering. Also the filter is soaking much of the goods from my solution.

Some days ago I stumbled upon the AeroPress coffee machine: AeroPress - Wikipedia

It can not handle much fluid but might be a good thing for smaller amounts of solution.

What do you think. Anyone experiences with it?
 
Aeropress is great for making hot aqueous extracts from roasted coffee beans. The oils from the coffee help to lubricate the plunger but not all other plant matter will have this effect.

Don't try filtering hot acid cooks of MHRB as the tannins precipitate out very rapidly with falling temperature to make an impenetrable sludge layer. MHRB tea is best filtered cold, after allowing the tannins to precipitate, and either by carefully decanting or syphoning the liquid away from the leathery tannin layer.

I can't remember if I filtered syrian rue tea with an Aeropress. Maybe I did. Again, syphoning or decanting delays clogging of the filter. Waiting overnight for solids to settle can be conveniently multi-tasked with a beneficial activity such as sleeping so it may be worth the patience.


Thinking of getting an Aeropress? Just get an Aeropress!

Happy brewing :)
 
In a word, no.

It's tiny, the pressure is significant, and the filter paper is very fine, and easily burst. And the stainless disk alternatives don't catch much at all.

I agree, the concept has great potential, but having tried it with various brews, it's not up to the task. Perhaps if you have a small amount of cloudy concentrate, that you really need to clear.....but the refrigerator is just as good, if not better, for that kind of stuff.

It's also very plastic ("food safe polyester resin" IIRC?) so not very durable in contact with many solvents.

Could've been perfect, but it's nowhere near, IMO.

We all need to chip in, and get a good centrifuge 😁
 
Thanks guys. I think I don't get one then. :)

downwardsfromzero said:
Waiting overnight for solids to settle can be conveniently multi-tasked with a beneficial activity such as sleeping so it may be worth the patience.

I realized that for example rue extraction only makes sense if you let things settle over night. I filtered through like 10 coffee filters and still have a milky fluid. Maybe I should get a good separation funnel instead of the aeropress then?

chan said:
but the refrigerator is just as good, if not better, for that kind of stuff
What do you mean by this? Letting settle in the fridge? Or is a colder temperature good for anything else? Is the settling faster in the fridge?
 
grollum said:
What do you mean by this? Letting settle in the fridge? Or is a colder temperature good for anything else? Is the settling faster in the fridge?

Yes. Fine sediments settle out best if chilled overnight, or maybe even for a few days for say, rue extracts. Once clear, decant carefully, using a filter/funnel to trap anything that strays over.
 
Resurrecting an old topic with new info. Behold the harmalog-cabin, made possible by the wonderful AeroPress. I'm still writing up the full tek, this is a sneak peek.
60223_c1ba2b79-82c3-49c1-ae46-b8b48b1c4193_harmala-logs.jpg
 

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One of the things that's important to me is not having any kit around me that even remotely resembles things used by certain folks who participate in significantly less-savory processes. While proper and extremely useful, a buchner funnel, erlenmeyer flask, and handheld vacuum pump definitely falls into that category.
 
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