[HARIO] V60 Five-Pour Recipe (Advanced Tips) - Matt Winton (World Brewers Cup Champion)

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  • Опубліковано 22 вер 2022
  • Enjoy delicious specialty coffee with Matt Winton, the 2021 World Brewers Cup champion!
    Matt shares the recipe that won him the title of World Champion!
    Check out the other videos in this series to learn Matt's recipes for various brewing methods: [ • 「Matt Winton's 'How To... ]
    Matt's winning V60 recipe: • [HARIO] V60 Five-Pour...
    HARIO Europe: www.hario-europe.com
    HARIO Europe Instagram: harioeurope
    Matt Winton: matt-winton
    HARIO:global.hario.com
    HARIO Instagram: / hario_japan
    #coffee #specialtycoffee #filtercoffee #interview #mattwinton #v60 #worldbrewerscup #fivepourmethod #recipe
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 17

  • @petermaris9697
    @petermaris9697 Рік тому +2

    Nice to hear how you use your pours as sole agitation vs the swirl.

  • @luisfernandezdecordoba5938
    @luisfernandezdecordoba5938 Рік тому

    I just got the metal v60 which
    Is nicely made and gets warm fast and keeps warm nicely. I did find the black rubbery base to have a very rubbery odor that I felt in the coffee. Anybody else have that? Today I made a wooden base and I'll try that tomorrow.

  • @gabrielenardelli3300
    @gabrielenardelli3300 Рік тому +3

    Very intersting analysis of the pours and useful tips. I'm pretty sure that your method is inspired to 4:6 of tetsu kasuya (my all time favorite recipe :D)... but i want try this method for sure. Thanks for sharing your knowledge. :)

    • @alexb2137
      @alexb2137 Рік тому +1

      kinda like a hybrid of patrick rolfs april recipe and the kasuya model

  • @fungorilla
    @fungorilla Рік тому +2

    What happens when you're pouring through a non visible carafe/vessel i.e. a solid coloured tumbler - will that be down to observing the dripper and how much water content then?

  • @dive2drive314
    @dive2drive314 Рік тому +1

    I keep looking at your light roast coffee beans with envy. My local roaster won't do anything light. I think he said something along the lines of "it's kind of tricky". Everything i get from them these days is dark roast, even when it says medium or light-medium. I used to get some great coffees that were more on the light side, but i just got some Ethiopian Guji and Kenya Mitondo that are dark and oily, but with a lot of lighter beans mixed in.
    Not impressed tbh... and i was so excited about that Kenya coffee, but it's just meh. A bitter dark coffee with brief hints of its true potential.
    This guy has a massive place with a ton of equipment. Come to think of it, i remember he did just get a new high-tech roasting machine, so i wonder if he is still tuning it?
    Still, is there a particular place you would recommend for getting high quality beans on the lighter side? I am in Canada but don't mind paying.. just at least to try.

  • @ggusta1
    @ggusta1 Рік тому +1

    Why do you recommend the metal v60 as opposed to the plastic?

    • @Joseph-C
      @Joseph-C Рік тому +1

      When you're trying to win a competition about taste, you test your options by tasting them. So, as he says in the video he has found in his experience that the metal V60 produces the best tasting coffee.

    • @mprz8188
      @mprz8188 5 місяців тому

      ​@@Joseph-CNo. What he meant is that the metal dripper produces
      A brighter tasting cup. Not a better one. The best coffee is the one you like most and it's entirely subjective. For me, the best material is ceramic. Matter of preference.

    • @humberto_eco
      @humberto_eco 2 місяці тому +1

      To make publicity of the new metal dripper.

    • @mprz8188
      @mprz8188 2 місяці тому

      @@humberto_eco don't think so... Metal is the most durable out of the entire lineup. What he's promoting is how the metal dripper, given its heat transfer and thermal mass, brings out more brightness of the coffee. On the other hand, metal is unbreakable, looks nice and can last forever

  • @ryjoy
    @ryjoy Рік тому +7

    "I want to go into a little bit more detail about how I chose this recipe"
    You see there was this guy in 2016 named Tetsu Kasuya...

  • @goeftberg
    @goeftberg Рік тому +25

    The recipe is exactly the Tetsu kasuya's recipe, funny to never mentioned it

    • @Mateus.Sanches
      @Mateus.Sanches Рік тому +5

      Tetsu has 45 seconds fixed every pour or i'm wrong? I dont use for a while

    • @smashzilla
      @smashzilla Рік тому +2

      Yeah. 'specially he talked about the first pour to adjust sweetness and acidity.

  • @phxv2
    @phxv2 Рік тому +4

    So he did the 4/6 method and renamed it PogChamp