T-92 Light Roast Coffee Paper Filter 01 40
The light roast papers are designed by CAFEC with the idea of attempting to minimize acidity of light roasts. The CAFEC team tend to lean towards darker-roasted coffees typically with very fresh roasts, this is because it works well with their osmotic flow brewing style.
As a roastery with an emphasis on relatively light roast coffee we love acidity in the right places, we do not want to mute this important expression of our coffee. The papers have very shallow creping on both sides, and the paper filters look more alike the Hario filters than the other three papers we have in the lineup.
In our tests the light roast paper took over a minute longer to draw down than the medium-dark papers. The final cup was unbalanced with a muted acidity and surprisingly it lacked body. It provided an interesting comparison to the other papers and the drip rate, noticably the dripper provided a pretty consistently slow drip rate which didn’t seem to stall too drastically towards the end (as seen in one of the other filter papers). This may be useful as a dripper if you want to have a controlled longer extraction time without the clogging of some of the other filters.
The light roast papers are designed by CAFEC with the idea of attempting to minimize acidity of light roasts. The CAFEC team tend to lean towards darker-roasted coffees typically with very fresh roasts, this is because it works well with their osmotic flow brewing style.
As a roastery with an emphasis on relatively light roast coffee we love acidity in the right places, we do not want to mute this important expression of our coffee. The papers have very shallow creping on both sides, and the paper filters look more alike the Hario filters than the other three papers we have in the lineup.
In our tests the light roast paper took over a minute longer to draw down than the medium-dark papers. The final cup was unbalanced with a muted acidity and surprisingly it lacked body. It provided an interesting comparison to the other papers and the drip rate, noticably the dripper provided a pretty consistently slow drip rate which didn’t seem to stall too drastically towards the end (as seen in one of the other filter papers). This may be useful as a dripper if you want to have a controlled longer extraction time without the clogging of some of the other filters.
The light roast papers are designed by CAFEC with the idea of attempting to minimize acidity of light roasts. The CAFEC team tend to lean towards darker-roasted coffees typically with very fresh roasts, this is because it works well with their osmotic flow brewing style.
As a roastery with an emphasis on relatively light roast coffee we love acidity in the right places, we do not want to mute this important expression of our coffee. The papers have very shallow creping on both sides, and the paper filters look more alike the Hario filters than the other three papers we have in the lineup.
In our tests the light roast paper took over a minute longer to draw down than the medium-dark papers. The final cup was unbalanced with a muted acidity and surprisingly it lacked body. It provided an interesting comparison to the other papers and the drip rate, noticably the dripper provided a pretty consistently slow drip rate which didn’t seem to stall too drastically towards the end (as seen in one of the other filter papers). This may be useful as a dripper if you want to have a controlled longer extraction time without the clogging of some of the other filters.