Английская Википедия:French press

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A French press

A French press, also known as a cafetière, cafetière à piston, caffettiera a stantuffo, press pot, coffee press, or coffee plunger, is a coffee brewing device, although it can also be used for other tasks. The earliest known device was patented in 1852 in France by Jacques-Victor Delforge and Henri-Otto Mayer.

Name

In English, the device is known in North America as a French press or coffee press; in Britain and Ireland as a cafetière, after the brand, La Cafetière; in New Zealand, Australia,[1] and South Africa[2] as a coffee plunger, and coffee brewed in it as plunger coffee. In Italian, it is known as a Шаблон:Lang;[3] in German as a Шаблон:Lang,[4] Шаблон:Lang ("stamp pot"), Шаблон:Lang, Шаблон:Lang ("coffee press") or Шаблон:Lang; in French as Шаблон:Lang,[5][6] or simply as Шаблон:Lang (also the usage in Dutch),[7] though some speakers might also use genericized trademarks, such as Melior or Bodum.

Design history

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Mayer & Delforge's 1852 patent

Over the years, the French press has undergone several design modifications. The first coffee press, which may have been made in France, was the modern coffee press in its rudimentary form—a metal or cheesecloth screen fitted to a rod that users would press into a pot of hot water and coffee grounds. In 1852, two Frenchmen, a Paris metalsmith and a merchant,[8] Henri-Otto Mayer and Jacques-Victor Delforge,[9] patented a forerunner of the French press, that did not create a seal around the filter.[10] A patent was filed by a Frenchman, Marcel-Pierre Paquet dit Jolbert, officially published on August 5, 1924.

In 1928,[11] a coffee press was created by Milanese designers Giulio Moneta[12] and Attilio Calimani which had a spring to seal the filter, and patented it in the United States in 1929.[13] It underwent several design modifications through Faliero Bondanini, who patented his own version in 1958 and manufactured it in French clarinet factory Martin SA under the brand name Melior.[14] Its popularity may have been aided in 1965 by its use in the Michael Caine film The Ipcress File.[15] The device was litigated and further popularized across Europe by Melior-Martin, a French company, Household Articles Ltd. (La Cafetiere), a British company, and Bodum (Chambord), a Danish tableware and kitchenware company.[16][17][18][19]

The modern French press consists of a narrow cylindrical beaker, usually made of glass or clear plastic, equipped with a metal or plastic lid and plunger that fits tightly in the cylinder and has a fine stainless steel wire or nylon mesh filter.

Operation

A video showing coffee beans being ground and placed in an empty press, then steeped in added hot water. After the plunger is depressed, the coffee is poured into a mug.
Preparation of a cup of coffee with a French press
  • Grind coffee beans coarse (9 on a 1-10 grinder, 30 on the Baratza Encore) about the consistency of kosher salt[20][21]
  • Boil filtered water about 8 ounces more water than you need to drink
  • Pour about 8 ounces boiled filtered water into French Press, for preheating[22][23]
  • After warming French Press, redistribute the 8 ounces boiled filtered water into drinking cups to pre-warm them
  • Using a 1:12 ratio, pour 60 grams[24] of coarsely ground coffee into the empty French Press
  • Pre-infuse the grounds with a small amount of hot water, Шаблон:Cvt[25]
  • Wait 30 seconds[20][25]
  • After Шаблон:CO2 blooms, stir to improve wetting of ground coffee[25][20]
  • Add hot water, Шаблон:Cvt,[26] in proportions of about Шаблон:Cvt of coffee grounds to 350 g of water (Шаблон:Cvt of water, 1:16[25][22]...1/12[27])
  • Place plunger on top of grounds, push it slowly halfway down, and pull back up slowly to just below the surface, preventing a dry grounds crust on the surface.[20]
  • Steep for four minutes (before experimenting with other steeping times like three[28] to four[21] to five[29] to eight[25] minutes)
  • Press plunger down slowly to ½" above layer of coffee grounds at bottom[23]
  • Pour out water preheating the drinking cups[23]
  • Pour the coffee into the drinking cups[23]
  • Serve the drinking cups[23]

Plunging slowly prevents accidental scalding of brewer and is purported to maximize the extraction of the oils and flavonoids from the ground bean.[25]

The mesh piston normally does not compress the coffee grounds, as most designs leave a generous space—about Шаблон:Cvt—below the piston in its lowest position. If the brewed coffee is allowed to remain in the beaker with the used grounds, the coffee may become astringent and bitter, though this is an effect that some users of the French press consider desirable.

Variations

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A French press made of stainless steel

French presses are more portable and self-contained than other coffee makers. Travel mug versions exist, which are made of tough plastic instead of the more common glass, and have a sealed lid with a closable drinking hole. Some versions are marketed to hikers and backpackers not wishing to carry a heavy, metal percolator or a filter using drip brew.

Other versions include stainless steel, insulated presses designed to keep the coffee hot, similar in design to thermos flasks. Coffee filters commonly used in South Indian households are a stainless steel version but without insulation. The decant known as decoction is mixed immediately with milk and sugar to make kaapi. One variation uses a "pull" design: the coffee grounds are placed in a mesh basket, which is then pulled into the lid after brewing, trapping the grounds out of the coffee. Others produce a similar effect by having shutters that can be closed via the top of the press, sealing the grounds off from the coffee entirely. French presses are also sometimes used to make cold brew coffee.

An all-in-one French press consists of a heating element that can receive its power from a 12-volt power source.[30]

Other uses

In the same way as coffee, a French press can also be used in place of a tea infuser to brew loose tea. To some extent the tea will continue to steep even after the plunger is depressed, which may cause the tea remaining in the press to become bitter. It might thus be advisable to decant the tea into a serving vessel after preparation. The same French press should not be used for both tea and coffee unless thoroughly cleaned, as coffee residue may spoil the flavor of the tea. However, this method is more suitable for light teas and is not suitable for Indian Chai (which must be boiled) or Chinese tea (which tends to be diffused for a long time, with tea leaves reused as a rule).[31]

A French press can also be used for straining broth from shellfish or other ingredients.[32]

Further reading

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:Portal

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Шаблон:Coffee