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<title>lemonknickers's Homepage</title>
<link>http://www.zorpia.com/lemonknickers</link>
<description></description>
<pubDate>Sat, 02 Jan 2010 22:37 EST</pubDate>
<lastBuildDate>Sat, 02 Jan 2010 22:37 EST</lastBuildDate>
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<item>
<title>4 Different Coffee Brewing Methods</title>
<link>http://www.zorpia.com/lemonknickers/journal/1934350</link>
<description>

&lt;h1>4 Different Coffee Brewing Methods&lt;/h1>
 &lt;strong>Author: &lt;a href="http://%20www.articlesbase.com/authors/aaron-matthews-morgan/38405.htm" title="Aaron Matthews-Morgan">Aaron
 Matthews-Morgan&lt;/a>&lt;/strong>&lt;br />
 &lt;p>Coffee Brewing Methods range from popular Espresso or French Press
 methods to lesser used methods like Turkish. Here we explore the four
 most popular Coffee Brewing Methods: Espresso, French Press, Drip
 Filtration and Mokta or Stovetop method. &lt;br />
 &lt;br />
 &lt;strong>Espresso&lt;/strong>&lt;br />
 Probably the most popular of the Coffee Brewing Methods in recent
 times is making an Espresso using a machine. Super hot, pressurized
 water is forced through fine ground, tightly packed coffee. The
 pressurized infusion process ensures that the water stays in contact
 with the coffee grounds long enough to draw out much of the coffee
 ground flavor. The water then finds a path through the coffee grounds.
 And the coffee commences to pour into your cup. When the water finds a
 path through the coffee grind it is referred to as the 'shot being
 pulled' through the group. &lt;br />
 &lt;br />
 The sign of a good espresso, using fresh coffee beans, is the richness
 of the crema. Crema is the hazelnut foam that sits on the surface of
 the coffee. This is produced by the pressurizing process and the oils
 of the coffee bean. Oils break down with time, and so a rich crema
 will be produced using fresh beans. And if you didn't catch it when I
 started talking about Espresso, use a fine grind. Using a course grind
 allows the water to 'brush past' the grind rather than infuse with it.
 Using a course grind will still produce a good coffee, but it will
 taste more like a coffee produced using a Drip Filter coffee brewing
 method rather than true Espresso coffee. &lt;br />
 &lt;br />
 &lt;strong>French Press&lt;/strong>&lt;br />
 One of the simplest of all Coffee Brewing Methods is the French Press
 or Plunger. This is probably the easiest way to make great coffee! The
 French Press works by directly mixing ground coffee with near boiling
 water. The coffee flavors get drawn out into the water and then the
 press or plunger is depressed, separating the exhausted coffee grind
 from the brew. While the process has a similar taste to the Drip
 Filtration style, the French Press can extract more flavor from the
 coffee grind by extending the brewing time. Manual infusion requires
 you to get your timing right. If you let the brewing process run too
 long you may end up with a bitter coffee. Conversely, if you brew too
 quickly you will have a weak tasting coffee. &lt;br />
 &lt;br />
 One more point, use a course grind. You don't want fine ground coffee
 escaping through the metal filter and into the brew. A dusty cup of
 coffee is not an experience worth having. &lt;br />
 &lt;br />
 &lt;strong>Drip Filtration&lt;br />
 &lt;/strong> &#160;Let's start with the Drip Filtration style. Drip Filtration
 is probably the most popular method of all. The Drip Filtration
 machine works by spraying hot water across ground coffee that is held
 in a conical shaped filter. The hot water then slowly moves through
 the ground coffee. Once the water reaches the bottom of the conical
 filter, it drips into a container beneath it. &lt;br />
 The most widely used conical filters are made of paper, while
 expensive stainless steel or gold conical filters are also available.
 When buying paper filters, be sure to use oxygen bleached paper.
 Chemically treated papers may affect the taste of your coffee. Another
 point to be aware of with paper filters is that you may also have some
 of the flavorful coffee oils trapped by the paper filter. It is the
 oils that produce the rich crema when you make an espresso. The grind
 is also important with Drip Filtration. If the grind is too fine, you
 may clog the pores of your filter. You can avoid this by using a
 course grind (read about grinding here). &lt;br />
 &lt;br />
 Finally, if you do not expect to drink the full pot of coffee, either
 by yourself (all that caffeine....) or with friends, beware the
 constantly heated coffee. It loses its flavor and may even become
 bitter. And the golden rule....never reheat coffee. &lt;br />
 &lt;strong>&lt;br />
 &lt;strong>Mokta Pot/Stovetop&lt;/strong>&lt;br />
 &lt;/strong> &#160;The Moka Pot style is also known as a Stovetop coffee pot.
 Moka pot's come in several sizes including 2, 4 or 6 cup capacities.
 The Moka Pot a simple 3 piece pot. The water reservoir is at the base,
 with a coffee basket in the middle and the brewed coffee ends up in
 the top. &lt;br />
 &lt;br />
 The coffee brewing method is very simple. The pot is placed on a stove
 top which heats the water in the lower reservoir. As the water reaches
 boiling point, the steam rises and the water starts to push upward
 through the coffee grounds. This continues to travel up the central
 funnel and seeps into the top chamber where it comes to rest. The
 process finishes when the coffee stops moving into the top chamber.
 This should only take a few minutes to brew depending on the cup size
 of the Moka pot. &lt;strong>&lt;br />
 &lt;br />
 &lt;/strong> &#160;The grind should be a fine grind, similar or finer to that
 used in an Espresso machine. If you want to fill the coffee basket the
 way traditional Italian drinkers do, then heap the coffee grounds high
 in the coffee basket and screw the two pieces together. Don't worry
 about compacting the coffee. When the top half of the pot is screwed
 on, the grounds will be compacted by the filter screen. You should end
 up with a dry, compacted puck of coffee grounds at the end of brewing.
 &lt;br />
 &lt;br />
 So there you have it. The four most popular Coffee Brewing Methods.
 &lt;strong>&lt;br />
 &lt;/strong>&lt;/p>
 &lt;p>Article Source: &lt;a title="4
 Different Coffee Brewing Methods" href="http://www.articlesbase.com/coffee-%20articles/4-different-coffee-brewing-methods-257703.html">http://www.articlesbase.com/coffee-
 articles/4-different-coffee-brewing-methods-257703.html&lt;/a>&lt;/p></description>
<category>Food &amp; Drinks</category>
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<pubDate>Sun, 11 Oct 2009 12:54 EST</pubDate>
</item>

<item>
<title>Hi all! coffee update</title>
<link>http://www.zorpia.com/lemonknickers/journal/1925749</link>
<description>&lt;p>&#160;Zara's&#160; Coffee Venue Group on Zorpia ==&gt; &lt;strong>&lt;a href="http://www.zorpia.com/group/coffee_venue_no21">HERE&lt;/a>&lt;/strong>&lt;br />&lt;/p>Hi just a journal update - not been in this blog for a while - how are you all ? :-)&lt;p>&#160;Anyway - I've started up some coffee venues all over the interwebs, but chose Zorpia to be one of my venues.&lt;/p>&lt;p> Some of them are for coffee business, some are for just friends and chatting about favorite coffee - coffee is my new hobby on this channel - so if you are a friend please do visit and share best LOCAL cafes and coffee shops in your town - if you've only got a tin shed or a starbucks whatever! add your coffee piccies to my group.&lt;/p>&lt;p>Zara &lt;3 &lt;br />&lt;/p>&lt;p>&#160;Zara's&#160; Coffee Venue Group on Zorpia ==&gt; &lt;strong>&lt;a href="../group/coffee_venue_no21">HERE&lt;/a>&lt;/strong>&lt;/p>&lt;p>&lt;br />&lt;/p></description>
<category>Food &amp; Drinks</category>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.zorpia.com/lemonknickers/journal/1925749</guid>
<pubDate>Thu, 27 Aug 2009 17:45 EST</pubDate>
</item>

<item>
<title>Whre's Zarreee ?</title>
<link>http://www.zorpia.com/lemonknickers/journal/1870774</link>
<description>&lt;p>I'm now findable at Twitter!&lt;/p>&lt;p>&lt;font size="5">&lt;strong>&lt;a href="http://www.twitter.com/lemonknickers">http://www.twitter.com/lemonknickers&lt;/a>&lt;/strong>&lt;/font> &lt;br />&lt;/p></description>
<category>Personal</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 06 Jan 2009 15:59 EST</pubDate>
</item>

<item>
<title>My Main Blogs are located at:</title>
<link>http://www.zorpia.com/lemonknickers/journal/1782919</link>
<description>
  
  &lt;p>&lt;a href="http://healthylemons.blogspot.com">http://healthylemons.blogspot.com&lt;/a> - healthy lemon's webmaster tool kit Internet marketing plus hype &amp;&#160;spangles with a cherry on top :)&lt;/p>
  &lt;p>&lt;a href="http://lemonvision.blogspot.com">http://lemonvision.blogspot.com&lt;/a>&#160;-my Weston-super-Mare blog for &lt;a href="http://www.weston-chatter.com">www.weston-chatter.com&lt;/a> &lt;/p>
  &lt;p>&lt;a href="http://blog.myspace.com/healthylemon">http://blog.myspace.com/healthylemon&lt;/a>&#160;- my personal, messy, raw diary type blog.&lt;/p></description>
<category>Computer &amp; Internet</category>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.zorpia.com/lemonknickers/journal/1782919</guid>
<pubDate>Thu, 13 Mar 2008 06:11 EST</pubDate>
</item>

<item>
<title>Ohhh look Zorpia have got RSS for journals!</title>
<link>http://www.zorpia.com/lemonknickers/journal/1782916</link>
<description>
  &lt;p>Which means I can create a widget of of the rss, which mean's I'm more likely to post in here.&lt;/p>
  &lt;p>I'll have to go see if tagged have Journal RSS too.&lt;/p>
  &lt;p>I feel like making lots of widgets at widget box!&lt;/p></description>
<category>Zorpia Related</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 13 Mar 2008 05:58 EST</pubDate>
</item>

<item>
<title>First post on Zorpia from Zara aka healthy lemon</title>
<link>http://www.zorpia.com/lemonknickers/journal/1736634</link>
<description>
  &lt;p>A gumtree forum user mainly, but thought I'd have a wonder over here as I like a change like very 5 minutes or so:)&lt;/p>
  &lt;p>Editor on journal looks&#160;fine for blogging here&#160;- I'm thinking of the myspace one now and this one compared, in most likelyhood I will have 1 to 3 blogs that will fill 3 different generes and keep me occupied while trying to figure out what i want to try and sell&lt;/p></description>
<category>Games</category>
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<pubDate>Sun, 14 Oct 2007 20:24 EST</pubDate>
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