The coffee roasters I work with told me about the coffee scrub trick, and I've actually used it pretty regularly for a quick hand scrub! Softest skin ever lol! Great vid bro!
Love the video, so natural and super informative! I’m definitely down for the grounds in the soil, did use the scrub technic, loved it esp. before jumping into a salty ocean, and still awaiting the opportunity to eat the rum infused coffee ice cream ...what!!!!!
Hi Brodie! This is the video that I needed to watch! My coffee grounds are piling up and looking for ways to repurpose, reuse, or recycle them. Thanks!
@@BrodieVissers True. I found out recently that some Japanese uses coffee as an ingredient for their famous coco curry sauce. This is big deal for me as I love Coco Ichibanya's curry.
@@BrodieVissers yup, my in-law who were stationed in Japan craved for an authentic Japanese curry, he tried this instructional vid by a Japanese mother. The ingredients list is at 0:32 of her video ua-cam.com/video/j6ClM5w96cE/v-deo.html
I haven't ever got into the fancy coffees. But I've been drinking maxwell house for almost ten years now, and I never get a bad cup. That's one of the main reasons why I'm hesitant to try different coffees, what if I buy a crappy coffee? Now I gotta drink a whole bag of crappy coffee
This is a great little video. Kudos sir. Shoutouts to local coffee as well. Have you tried Tamp Coffee's offerings of espresso and single origin? Social does their roasting, very very nice coffee.
In the beginning of your video you poured water over white and stainless coffee contraption. Please forgive the ignorance and wording. I am new to all of this. Great video. I definitely subscribed. I’m heading over to binge watch while I wait on reply. Thank you so much for sharing. 🤍
Hey, thanks for asking! This is actually a pour-over coffee method. You may see it again in some of my other videos. It's basically like a classic American electric coffee maker method, but "poured over" by hand, hence the name. I hope you can try it yourself someday!
add a teaspoon of baking soda to the coffee ground water when dying paper or wool - this will lower the pH closer to neutral and will prevent your material from rapidly decaying from the acidity in the coffee.
Sure, you could dry it out, put it in a spice grinder, or back on fine setting in coffee grinder to get a really fine grind. make sure it's very dry though.
The coffee roasters I work with told me about the coffee scrub trick, and I've actually used it pretty regularly for a quick hand scrub! Softest skin ever lol! Great vid bro!
AronBagel oh that’s awesome! I’m glad it worked out for you too :). Thanks buddy
Love the video, so natural and super informative! I’m definitely down for the grounds in the soil, did use the scrub technic, loved it esp. before jumping into a salty ocean, and still awaiting the opportunity to eat the rum infused coffee ice cream ...what!!!!!
Haha, thank you River, I hope you've since had the rum ice cream delight over there :)
Salty ocean + coffee grounds sounds perfect!
Great video! I make so much coffee and throw away all the grounds. Now I’m gonna save them. Thanks for these useful tips 🙏
Please let me know how it works out Josip!
I used coffee ground mostly for garden compost and facial scrub frequently
I am making coffee dough, to make fossils with my children. I have used it for plants, but not for cleaning, I will try it. thank you for sharing.
Oh that's so cool! Great suggestion, I'd love to see that recipe for that one :)
Hi, nice video. May I ask how long to body scrub can last? And keep it in the fridge?
I put coffee grounds in my cat’s litter to cover the smell, and it works. ✌️
Hi Brodie! This is the video that I needed to watch! My coffee grounds are piling up and looking for ways to repurpose, reuse, or recycle them. Thanks!
Oh awesome! I've also found they can go well in some baking and for marinating some meats or fish if you're feeling creative :)
@@BrodieVissers True. I found out recently that some Japanese uses coffee as an ingredient for their famous coco curry sauce. This is big deal for me as I love Coco Ichibanya's curry.
@@arawsandiego9903 oh really! I DIDN'T know that one, I'll have to try now :)
Thanks!
@@BrodieVissers yup, my in-law who were stationed in Japan craved for an authentic Japanese curry, he tried this instructional vid by a Japanese mother. The ingredients list is at 0:32 of her video
ua-cam.com/video/j6ClM5w96cE/v-deo.html
@@arawsandiego9903 ok perfect, thank you :)
I haven't ever got into the fancy coffees. But I've been drinking maxwell house for almost ten years now, and I never get a bad cup. That's one of the main reasons why I'm hesitant to try different coffees, what if I buy a crappy coffee? Now I gotta drink a whole bag of crappy coffee
Do not use coffee grounds for cleaning pots and pans as you should never put coffee grounds down your sink as they will clog your sink or bath.
Exactly!
Good idea
Have fun cleaning that shower🤣
This is a great little video. Kudos sir. Shoutouts to local coffee as well. Have you tried Tamp Coffee's offerings of espresso and single origin? Social does their roasting, very very nice coffee.
Thanks so much Joshua! I haven’t been to Tamp before but I’ve tried social a number of times and they’re great :)
Making the scrub tomorrow
nice! I suggest go easy on the coconut oil unless you have dry skin and want to moisturize :)
That was awesome
In the beginning of your video you poured water over white and stainless coffee contraption. Please forgive the ignorance and wording. I am new to all of this. Great video. I definitely subscribed. I’m heading over to binge watch while I wait on reply. Thank you so much for sharing. 🤍
Hey, thanks for asking! This is actually a pour-over coffee method. You may see it again in some of my other videos. It's basically like a classic American electric coffee maker method, but "poured over" by hand, hence the name. I hope you can try it yourself someday!
I love it
Don’t let the coffee body scrub go down the drain. It’s not good for the plumbing.
Actually, using them for all of these cases, never throwing my coffee grounds away after drinking
I usually just mix my coffee grounds with moisturizing soap it's nice and really easy
ah yeah, good idea!
add a teaspoon of baking soda to the coffee ground water when dying paper or wool - this will lower the pH closer to neutral and will prevent your material from rapidly decaying from the acidity in the coffee.
Great tip!
Men scrubbing is cool thing though
Is it possible to turn the coffe grinds into a finer powder? To simply add them to creams
Sure, you could dry it out, put it in a spice grinder, or back on fine setting in coffee grinder to get a really fine grind. make sure it's very dry though.
@@BrodieVissersI would not recommend putting coffee grounds back through a commercial grinder.
@@Jugger42 a hand grinder should be fine.. not sure about a big commercial grinder, but don't see the major issue.
how so you dry out your coffee grounds?
Just lay them as flat as you can, and turn a few times a day. You can also put them in the oven on low heat to evaporate faster
I just stick them in the compost.
My flower base got moldy after that.
You can just rebrew it. It tastes the same
You reuse the coffee by wasting more water…
You literally copied every other video on this same subject verbatim and added vocal fry
If you open your mouth in the shower, its like a Waterpik.