Ratio Four 시리즈 2가 새로운 커피를 테스트하는 데 사용되는 이유
Wired AI
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🔬 연구
#리뷰
#태그없음
#ratio four
#review
#바이오핵
#생산성
#커피
#할인
원문 출처: Wired AI · Genesis Park에서 요약 및 분석
요약
최신 가정용 커피 머신의 등장으로 기존의 드립 커피도 마니아들을 위한 공간으로 재평가받고 있습니다. 저자는 지난 1년 넘게 라티오 포our 시리즈 투를 모닝 커피의 원천으로 사용하며, 신상 커피를 테스트하는 용도로도 활용하고 있습니다.
본문
Coffee is the original office biohack and the nation’s most popular productivity tool. As we lose sleep to the changeover to daylight saving time, the caffeine-addicted WIRED Reviews team is writing about our favorite coffee brewing routines and devices that'll keep us alert and maybe even happy in the morning. Today, reviewer Matthew Korfhage expounds on his lasting love for drip coffee—and why the Ratio Four never leaves his counter. In the days after, we’ll add other Java.Base stories about other WIRED writers' favorite brewing methods. As with any vice worth having, a morning coffee routine can take on the character of religion. And like a lot of religion, it's often born as much accident as moral conviction. My denomination is good, old-fashioned drip coffee. That's what I drink first thing, before I even think about crafting a shot of espresso. I’m WIRED’s lead coffee writer and I've developed a deep fondness for coffee's many variations, from espresso to Aeropress to cold brew. But “coffee” to me, in my deepest soul, still means a steaming mug of unadulterated drip. Luckily, that's also the coffee arena that has been transformed the most by technology in recent years. The drip coffee from the Ratio Four coffee maker (now quietly on its second generation) feels to me like coffee's purest form, the liquid distillation of what my coffee beans smell like fresh off the grinder. My love of filter coffee began as a teenager traveling and studying in India—perhaps my first glimpse of adult freedom. This is where I drank the first full cup of coffee I remember finishing. In Jaipur, filter coffee was an intense, jet-black gravity brew typically mixed with milk and sugar. I decided that if I was going to drink coffee, I would take it straight and learn to like it on its own terms. A newfound friend, tipping jaggery into his own brew, laughed at my insistence I didn't want sweetened milk. I then downed a cup so thick and strong and caffeinated it made my hairs stand at perpendicular. If I'd made a mistake, I refused to admit it. I carried this preference back to Oregon, drinking unadulteratedly black, terrible drip coffee at all-night diners and foul office breakrooms. Black coffee had become a morality clause, though it was hardly a matter of taste. It wasn't until years later that I discovered that drip coffee could actually be an indulgence every bit as refined as pinkies-up espresso. Upping the Drip In part, this was a problem of technology. Aside from a classic Moccamaster, it's only very recently that home drip coffee makers have been able to produce a truly excellent cup. For years, I didn't keep one at my home. What woke me up to drip's possibilities was a new wave of cafés in Portland, first third-wave coffee pioneer Stumptown Coffee and then especially Heart Coffee Roasters in Portland. Heart's Norwegian owner-roaster, Wille Yli-Luoma, expounded to me at length about the aromatic purity of light-roast immersion coffee—the fruity aromatics of a first-crack Ethiopian that could smack of peach or nectarine or blueberry. Scandinavians had long prized this, he told me, and had evolved light-roast coffee into pure craft. America was finally catching up. Still, I could never quite get that same flavor or clarity on a home brewer. Not until recently. To get the best version, I still had to walk up the street to Heart and get my coffee from the guy who roasted it. Or I had to spend way too long drizzling water over coffee in a conical filter. I rarely wanted to do this while still bleary from sleep, already late for work. What it took was a whole new generation of drip coffee makers modeled on café pour-over, complete with agitating showerheads, tight temperature control, and a “bloom” phase that wets down the coffee grounds and lets the coffee off-gas its carbon dioxide and extract more fully. A new generation of machines from makers like Bonavita and Oxo set off a revolution in home drip coffee that's now in full swing. The Machine I Use to Test Coffee My most-used machine lately is the Four small-batch brewer from Portland company Ratio. I spend a lot of time testing coffee and espresso machines. And so the machine on my counter rotates often, depending on whatever new machine has rolled up my way. The coffee also rotates quite often. But it’s the Four that rarely leaves my counter after trying almost every high-end drip coffee maker on the market. There are machines, like the Fellow Aiden and the xBloom Studio, that have far more versatility and customizability to get the perfect cup for each person. What I love about the Four is that it's made for my natural routine. I brew just a mug or two at a time, and the Four is optimized for eight or 16-ounce batches. It also brews for rich extraction without requiring me to futz around with each new bean I'm trying out. The Four brews long, a bit over five minutes for a full 20-ounce batch, with a bloom cycle that's also pretty patient. It's a gentle, even, and ful
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