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Having broken my little Bodum cafetiere on my last camping trip I am in the market for a new device to prepare a decent brew while on the move. Weight not an issue as it will sit in the back of the Land Rover. Not wanting a glass based cafetiere again and aware that there are better solutions now available.
What can anyone recommend (from personal experience) that does the job, doesn't take 2 hours to operate, will work anywhere in any situation, won't break the bank, and is clumsy farmer proof?????
I would say an aeropress is what you want.
+1 for Aeropress
Starbucks Via for ultimate light weight (which I see you aren't after as I read the post). Otherwise Aeropress. Excellent coffee and super easy and quick. And plastic. Vastly easier and much quicker than a moka pot.
I'm a big fan of the aeropress, but if you like cafetierre coffee just get a stainless one.
aeropress
Starbucks Via for ultimate light weight (which I see you aren't after as I read the post). Otherwise Aeropress. Excellent coffee and super easy and quick. And plastic. Vastly easier and much quicker than a moka pot.
Rule one of sales. Big up your own product, don't diss the competition. The customer isn't stupid.
For me its the jetboil with french press attachment. 18g extra weight for the french press bit. Jetboil boils the water qui9cker than anything else I have used and is very convenient. I take ground coffee in little plastic bags in measured doses
When I am prepared to take a bit more weight I use a bialletti "espresso" machine which makes great coffee but in 25 ml doses. Its a minature stovetop gadget that comes with a very cute demi tasse tin mug
Wot?
For lightweight and simple, just get an metal filter that goes in your mug. eg https://www.amazon.co.uk/QCK-Coffee-Bean-Tea-Filter/dp/B002XW0F6W
(Or the MSR Mugmate is the same thing, but costs twice as much)
[url= http://www.waterbobble.uk/coffeeandtea ]Presse by Bobble[/url]
The silicon gasket might smell a bit when new but I am not bothered.
Very good and simple to use. 😛
Quick, easy, and good coffee when camping.
Find a good coffee shop. Pitch your tent outside. Easy.
[img] https://www.rei.com/media/product/838193 [/img]
They also make a portable hand bean grinder that fits inside it.
(Our favourite thing on a days canoeing, it's even been up a munro recently)
TJ, do you have a link to that, or what is it called? I've always fancied one as I never trust (or rather, judge when it's done before it's burnt) my moka pot.
Turkish style?
Or stainless cafetiere.
Or a Moka pot.
Depends what sort of coffee you like? I quite like the luxury of espresso when bivi'd. Oddly I'm not fussed when camping!
tinas - its a bialetti mini express. Lovely little thing makes 25 ml at a time. Mines 20 years old but they are stillavailable on ebay and the like
I read about putting a spoon of decent coffee in a filter paper and tying it with chefs string. Put in mug pour hot water over and allow infusion.
https://gearjunkie.com/coffee-brew-in-outdoors-camping
tinas - just what I found thru google
https://www.coffeecompany.com.au/hardware/espresso-pots-stovetop-espresso/bialetti-mini-express-1-cup
Or for the more snobbish...
I prefer the Lyons, use them all the time at work & have converted a fair few staff over. They weigh about twice as much as a teabag.
Ok, so making a cup isn't a ritual like using an Aeropress etc but It tastes good to me.
Gsi make a version of the bialatti mini tj. Works well used to use mine all the time at hone
'Stellar' make very good stainless steel, double walled cafetieres. I've had one in my workshop for about six years, still looks like new. Pricey though, about £50, but you only have to drop it once and it's paid for itself, i figure.
Aeropress - I keep one in the back of the van with a meths Trangia and hand grinder. Possibly the slowest way to make coffee but when camping I'm up an hour before anyone else so it's a nice peaceful ritual. Also comes in handy at services on the way, if we stop in an aire with no cafe, day down the beach or whatever. The bottle of meths lasts forever.
+1 for the Lyons Coffee bags.
As good as without all the faff
km79 has it. The lighter the pack the more enjoyable the camping trip. If I'm walking more than 20km a day then the stove is only put in the pack if it's the only way of getting drinking water.
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Aeropress with a metal filter here
Coffee is stored in the plunger which i insert upside down when packing.
Bialletti sometimes if its in the car but its more faffy and can be a bit sketchy on a camp stove unless its totally flat.
Sachets if weight is a reall issue
If weight is really an issue I make coffee "cowboy style:" Put ground coffee in mug. Add hot water. Stir. Wait 5 minutes. Grounds have sunk to bottom (a few taps on the side helps. Drink, leaving last 1/2 inch in bottom of mug. Works for me because I like my coffee strong and black anyway. You may get the odd speck of grounds, but this is camping, not a hotel.
Cost: £0
Extra weight: 0g
Aeropress definitely.
Or check out Sudden Coffee.
km79 has it. The lighter the pack the more enjoyable the camping trip.
That very much depends on the sort of camping you're doing. If I'm with my family for a couple of weeks, I want some creature comforts.
Aeropress will work very well for you, I don't take mine out the house though (and mostly drink Kenco Millicano at home 😆 )
I have a GSI ultralight java drip which I sometimes take on camping trips, very quick to use and very easy to clean up. It's basically just a coffee filter
Coffee bags are also a nice idea as it's so easy to do
Mocha pot for me. Good coffee anytime. Had it since 2004 and used on every camping trip since. Only needed a few seals in that time for pennies.
I've been using one of these for 10 years, at home and out and about.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/SwissGold-Coffee-Filter-reusable-KF300/dp/B0056ZVVHA
weighs eff all, couldn't be simpler to use, makes good coffee. Takes up some space, but you can pack stuff inside it.
tinas - just what I found thru google
https://www.coffeecompany.com.au/hardware/espresso-pots-stovetop-espresso/bialetti-mini-express-1-cup
Cheers, added to the birthday wishlist!
nedrapier - Member
I've been using one of these for 10 years, at home and out and about.http://www.amazon.co.uk/SwissGold-Coffee-Filter-reusable-KF300/dp/B0056ZVVHA
weighs eff all, couldn't be simpler to use, makes good coffee. Takes up some space, but you can pack stuff inside it.
Price is a bit steep! 😯
josh, yup, agreed, a mate gave me his when he moved out of a houseshare so free to me.
In terms of value and cost per use, I've used it thousands of times, and it still looks just the same as it did 10 years ago. Don't know how long Dave had it before me.
WOW, some great ideas so far.
Sure beats the sieve with a tissue I had to use last weekend following the mistaken assumption that our rented cottage would have some means to make a decent coffee 🙂
Buy another cafetiere from Sainsbury's (£6 for the mini) and risk breaking it again.
I've got a stainless cafetiere for sailing trips. From Heals sale many years ago.
chewkw - Member
Presse by Bobblewww.youtube.com/watch?v=OBgOwY5kgO4
The silicon gasket might smell a bit when new but I am not bothered.
Very good and simple to use.
POSTED 13 HOURS AGO #
This +1
This may or may not be any good for making coffee but I like his survivalist style of home decoration.
Was hunting for the Bodum drip coffee maker I have (which is a little fiddley to get the coffee amount right, but otherwise pretty good) and came across this, which looks interesting: http://www.johnlewis.com/bodum-travel-press-coffee-maker-set-with-extra-lid-0-35l-black/p450068
Edit: kinda similar to this: https://www.rei.com/product/798277/gsi-outdoors-collapsible-javadrip-slim-drip-coffee-maker?cm_mmc=aff_AL-_-133859-_-191497-_-NA&avad=191497_ed97303b
I use the Aeropress when car camping.
The main reason for this over all of the other options is that the cleanup is SO easy. Just pop the puck of grounds into the binbag and wipe off the plunger. Ready to go again.
If weight is really an issue I make coffee "cowboy style:" Put ground coffee in mug. Add hot water. Stir. Wait 5 minutes. Grounds have sunk to bottom (a few taps on the side helps. Drink, leaving last 1/2 inch in bottom of mug. Works for me because I like my coffee strong and black anyway. You may get the odd speck of grounds, but this is camping, not a hotel.
Plus you will save space not having to pack any laxatives.
I've had a couple of those Bodum french press mugs and I like it. Mine is a plastic one and is pretty light. I even tend to carry when working out and about if I know that I'm not likely to find decent coffee.






