Yes I did. Exactly the same..That is awesome. Did you use basically the same PG extraction method for the coffee?
Yes I did. Exactly the same..That is awesome. Did you use basically the same PG extraction method for the coffee?
Truly!I roast my own coffee beans (yes, if you need yet another hobby to take up your time trying roasting your own coffee).
You could be on to something..Truly!But the payoff is worth it.
BGL, as a home roaster I assume you know that coffee is best extracted when the water temperature is ~200 degrees and extraction time is ~4 minutes. Any thoughts along these lines? What if I get my PG to near 200 deg, add it to the coffee, and then begin straining pretty much immediately? I think I'll gamble a couple teaspoons of homeroast and 30 ml or so of pg and try it.
Sorry for the hijack. Just thinking out loud.
Thanks, yeah; good idea.You could be on to something..Just check the boiling point on PG..
Truly!But the payoff is worth it.
BGL, as a home roaster I assume you know that coffee is best extracted when the water temperature is ~200 degrees and extraction time is ~4 minutes. Any thoughts along these lines? What if I get my PG to near 200 deg, add it to the coffee, and then begin straining pretty much immediately? I think I'll gamble a couple teaspoons of homeroast and 30 ml or so of pg and try it.
Sorry for the hijack. Just thinking out loud.
Yes I did. Exactly the same..![]()
I thought about using my areopress, but it was such a small experimental batch that I just used my espresso machine's portafilter basket with a coffee filter underneath that. Let it drip. The aeropress seems like a better idea for my little experiment, though, to keep from getting overextraction bitterness.
I used a blend of Brazil, Sumatra, and Uganda (I was going for a moka java, but was out of Ethiopia so I substituted Uganda) which I just roasted today. Fresh roasted coffee, like freshly mixed juice needs to rest at least a couple of days, but this wasn't bad for a quick & dirty experiment. I heated the PG until it starting vaporizing pretty good; it never did boil (I still need to look up the boiling point of PG).
5 ml batch @ 24 mg/ml nic:
4 parts 60% nic
1 part PG
5 parts diluted VG (70% VG, 30% distilled water -- 80/20 is probably better)
7 or 8 drops of my coffee extract (I meant to go 5 drops but had a spastic FAILure)
4 drops brown sugar flavor from DIY Flavorshack (Dawnmarie) I may try caramel flavor next time.
Not too strong coffee tasting, but the juice is a bit dark, a result of my accident. Pretty dadgum good vape!
Greg, I've always just boiled my water and then waited for it to quit bubbling before use in a ccd pourover, chemex, or aeropress as per what I read at Sweet Maria's, GCBC, and others. As you say, it's a matter of what you like, I guess. 176 sounds a bit too cool to me. Hmm... Worth looking into though. I mostly just use an espresso machine now anyway.
Thanks, and sorry to hear about your roaster.
I'll still try the above the above method (Jimi's?); it just seemed to me that coffee should be extracted at higher heat, is why I tried what I did.
I'm glad it worked out for you. I hope the cinnamon tastes good for you...Cool, I have a cinnamon tincture on the stove now. I loves me a dash of cinnamon in my coffee.
BTW, my coffee extract juice is a whole lot better now, after mellowing for 24+ hours.
Soooo, I extracted my favorite coffee straight into some of the 36mg VG
I thought high heat decreases the nic. level.Tried something new last night. goodprophets has a big nic sale on right now so I can afford to be a tiny bit wasteful - I bought half a liter of 36mg VG last time they had a sale and just bought another half a liter this week.
Soooo, I extracted my favorite coffee straight into some of the 36mg VG
I like my coffee strong and this should allow me to get higher nic levels and still use the cheap 36mg GP nic. It'll be interesting.
edit: Couple other tips I've learned - my DIY coffee does tend to taste better after steeping for three days or so, so when I get down to about 15ml left I make a new batch. Also, IME paper cone filters are much easier to use than the other kind. I'm gonna buy one of those Melitta one-cup plastic brewers for this when I find one in the store - you guys have seen them. They hold a small cone filter and sit on top of your cup. Should eliminate the need for a chip clip![]()