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In this episode, I get real about one of the most frustrating experiences a coffee brewer can have — doing everything "right" and still ending up with a flat, lifeless cup. I was working with an Ethiopian white honey process, medium roast that leaned lighter, and no matter what I threw at it — different grinders, different filters, faster pours — the coffee just wasn't responding. What I eventually realized was that I had been forcing the coffee into my routine instead of listening to what the coffee itself was telling me.
The turning point came when I finally paid attention to the slow drawdown and stopped fighting it. I ground finer, let the brew take three to five minutes — even went wild with a double filter setup — and the cup transformed. It became juicy, lively, and exactly what I had been chasing all along. By the end of this episode, you'll understand why your brewing routine, as solid as it is, might actually be your biggest obstacle — and how learning to observe and respond to what your coffee is doing can unlock cups you never expected. I also dig into why coffees like white honey process behave differently, and what the slow drawdown is actually trying to tell you before you rush to "fix" it.
Support the show
For good tasty coffee, check us out at: everydaybeans.com
For tips, tricks and still trying to figure it out: https://www.youtube.com/@everyday-beans
By Oaks, the coffee guySend us Fan Mail
In this episode, I get real about one of the most frustrating experiences a coffee brewer can have — doing everything "right" and still ending up with a flat, lifeless cup. I was working with an Ethiopian white honey process, medium roast that leaned lighter, and no matter what I threw at it — different grinders, different filters, faster pours — the coffee just wasn't responding. What I eventually realized was that I had been forcing the coffee into my routine instead of listening to what the coffee itself was telling me.
The turning point came when I finally paid attention to the slow drawdown and stopped fighting it. I ground finer, let the brew take three to five minutes — even went wild with a double filter setup — and the cup transformed. It became juicy, lively, and exactly what I had been chasing all along. By the end of this episode, you'll understand why your brewing routine, as solid as it is, might actually be your biggest obstacle — and how learning to observe and respond to what your coffee is doing can unlock cups you never expected. I also dig into why coffees like white honey process behave differently, and what the slow drawdown is actually trying to tell you before you rush to "fix" it.
Support the show
For good tasty coffee, check us out at: everydaybeans.com
For tips, tricks and still trying to figure it out: https://www.youtube.com/@everyday-beans