Hot coffee brewing solutions for deep woods camping
I'll be going pretty deep into the woods with some buddies and staying in a cabin; I'll have access to a campfire and a wood stove. Can also bring batteries of any kind with me.
I'd love to bring my favorite coffee (Death Wish!) with me but am looking for a lightweight method of brewing it with minimal equipment. Weight is a key factor since its a solid hike in/out and I'll already be schlepping a fair amount of weight with me.
Any recommended methods/approaches here? Not interested in "just add water" or instant coffee, and also not looking to go super crazy primitive. Just hoping there's a decent off-grid coffee solution out there that will allow me to enjoy my caffeine in peace. Thanks in advance!
There are some collapsible coffee drippers you can get. Don't take so much space, and kind of light-weight. Your milleag …
5y ago
As Anger Density recommended I would recommend making a coffee teabag with some coffee filters and floss. This can be d …
5y ago
I have an Oomph coffee press. It works very well, and produces very good coffee if you only want one cup at a time. Al …
5y ago
There is a traditional way of doing it here in the south of Brazil, called "café tropeiro". You heat the water un …
5y ago
I recently improvised this pour over solution while traveling and it's so simple, light, delicious, compostable and chea …
5y ago
I make camp coffee as follows: I use large tin cans as pots. They can be gotten at any restaurant, cafeteria and hold …
5y ago
What I like to do is essentially make little tea bags but with coffee filled with coffee grounds. You take the filters y …
5y ago
Indonesian "mud" coffee works fine. If coffee beans are ground sufficiently fine, you can just put some together with n …
5y ago
As long as you can pre-grind the beans, why not make a kind of tea bag with a coffee filter? Measure the appropriate amo …
5y ago
I recommend either making camp coffee (or cowboy coffee I see it referred to) or bringing an aeropress. They are light, …
5y ago
My solution is the same arrangement I use at home. I use a Porlex hand grinder to grind the beans, and an Aeropress to d …
5y ago
Another alternative, similar to cowboy coffee, but a bit more refined is a Turkish style cezve (AKA ibrik). These are us …
5y ago
If you're an espresso purist you could try a minipresso. They're a hand powered esspresso machine. I was introduced to t …
5y ago
Similar to @JollyJoker, I tend to make single-cup pour over coffee when backpacking. While I normally buy disposable (re …
5y ago
The easiest and most reusable method in my opinion is the Moka Pot. Simply add water and ground beans to the base and …
5y ago
I've used one of these filter holders on top of a thermos, pouring hot water a little at a time. If you don't want to …
5y ago
I just ran the experiment of making hot coffee with a cotton coffee sock instead of doing my usual cold brew and it work …
5y ago
I have used a travel coffee plunger with pre-ground coffee. It worked well (I actually prefer plunger coffee to espresso …
5y ago
As long as you are okay with grinding your beans at home, why not just make cowboy coffee. Basically you Put your tin …
5y ago
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19 answers
I make camp coffee as follows:
I use large tin cans as pots. They can be gotten at any restaurant, cafeteria and hold about 3 quarts. It's quick work to add a wire bail to them.
Morning coffee for two:
Put about 4 mugs of water into the pot. Sprinkle about 6 tablespoons of coffee grounds on the water. Do NOT stir. Ideally you have a small mountain of grounds floating on the middle of the pot. (I use nabob -- any decent drip grind will work) Put on the fire. Bring to a boil. Boiling is abrupt. You will see a corner of bubbles on the edge of the mound. It can go from bubbling lightly to boiling over in a few seconds.
Remove from heat immediately.
Set on ground, and dribble about a quarter cup of cold water into the pot. This will settle most of the grounds.
Pour into cups and enjoy.
Don't drink the last swallow in the cup.
Park the can near the fire, but not in it. It's ok if the side toward the fire very gently boils.
Advantages: No additional gear.
Downsides: If you do this on a stove, prepare to clean coffee grounds out of your stove.
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I have an Oomph coffee press. It works very well, and produces very good coffee if you only want one cup at a time. Allegedly it can also be used for drinking out of like a travel mug, but personally I find it leaks a little if I do that, so I just pour it into a regular mug.
It's plastic so I'd be worried about its survivability for serious hiking, but if you're just lugging stuff to a cabin then you should be OK.
Cafetiere-style single-cup coffee presses do exist. I've tried a couple (including Bodum), but they all seem to be made cheaply when it comes to the press and the seal round the edge of the mesh, which means you end up with gritty coffee full of grounds.
The Oomph does only make one mug at a time though. If you're brewing coffee for your whole group, consider just getting a stainless steel cafetiere. They don't weigh very much.
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There are some collapsible coffee drippers you can get. Don't take so much space, and kind of light-weight. Your milleage may vary.
This post was sourced from https://outdoors.stackexchange.com/a/22444. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0.
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As Anger Density recommended I would recommend making a coffee teabag with some coffee filters and floss. This can be done is a couple easy steps:
- Grind beans
- Put serving size in coffee filter (enough for a mug or a whole pot)
- Tie coffee filter at top with floss, put it in a ziploc bag for safekeeping
- Boil water with camp stove and steep teabag for a couple minutes, enjoy!
As a bonus you can use the leftover floss after you make your coffee to clean your teeth. Simple and effective!
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There is a traditional way of doing it here in the south of Brazil, called "café tropeiro".
You heat the water until it boils, then add coffee powder and mix it. The secret is to put some pieces of the burning coal from the fire in the coffee pot, this makes the powder go to the bottom of the pot faster(don't ask me why, but it works), so you can drink the coffee while it is still hot and without powder.
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I just ran the experiment of making hot coffee with a cotton coffee sock instead of doing my usual cold brew and it works fine.
It's almost the same as cowboy coffee but has the advantage of seperating the grounds from the coffee.
- Place the coffee sock with grounds inside in water that was boiling for a couple of minutes to steep.
- Remove sock and drink coffee.
It's also possible to make cowboy coffee and then use the cotton sock to filter out the grounds, just stretch it over the mouth of a nalgene and pour the coffee in.
The other option would be to use it to make cold brew coffee overnight and then warm it in the morning. Simply put the required amount of grounds into a nalgene of cold water overnight.
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As long as you are okay with grinding your beans at home, why not just make cowboy coffee. Basically you
- Put your tin cup on the fire/stove and bring the water to a boil
- Remove the cup from the heat and let the water cool a bit so you don't burn the grounds
- Stir in the grounds and bring the water back to a simmer being careful not to burn the coffee
- Remove from the heat again and let it steep for a couple of minutes while stirring occasionally
- Let the grounds settle (you can add cold water or hit the side of the pot to help them along)
- Drink carefully
As it takes no equipment, you can practice brewing at home and see if you can manage to get a cup of coffee without any/too many grounds.
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What I like to do is essentially make little tea bags but with coffee filled with coffee grounds. You take the filters you would normally filter your coffee through, put a little coffee in it and tie it off with a rubber band. When the time comes for them to be used, you warm up some water, and throw it in, then take it out whenever you desire.
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I recommend either making camp coffee (or cowboy coffee I see it referred to) or bringing an aeropress. They are light, probably around 200 grams and easy to clean and operate. Grind the coffee in advance and store in single serve zip lock bags.
This post was sourced from https://outdoors.stackexchange.com/a/22405. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0.
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My solution is the same arrangement I use at home. I use a Porlex hand grinder to grind the beans, and an Aeropress to do the extraction.
The Porlex mini grinder (https://www.porlexgrinders.com/collections/frontpage/products/porlex-mini-grinder) is perfect for a single dose of grounds, and is very compact; although it doesn't have a convenient way of containing the handle. The Porlex grinders are high quality - i.e. ceramic conical burr grinder, and with good fresh roasted beans provide a great result.
The Aeropress (https://aeropress.com/) is also quite compact, and I can, in fact, fit the mini grinder inside the inner plunger of the Aeropress for transport. The only things I can't fit in this package are the grinding handle for the mini grinder and the paper filters for the Aeropress, but these are both small and can fit wherever you have a slot of space. The Aeropress comes with a scoop, funnel and stirring paddle; none of which are necessary for its use, so these things don't need to take up any of your packing space.
I am very lazy, but I am also not a savage, and this equipment gives me the ability to produce a wonderful cup of proper coffee with a minimum of fuss or hassle, and it just happens to have the side-effect of being a physically compact kit.
All you need apart from these items (and your beans) is a cup and hot water.
I have used this paraphernalia when camping myself, and I found it to be a very effective solution.
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As long as you can pre-grind the beans, why not make a kind of tea bag with a coffee filter? Measure the appropriate amount of coffee and fold/staple the filter closed around it. Steep for an appropriate amount of time in hot (or cold) water and then burn the waste. It would add negligible weight to your pack and give you pre-measured portions. Cleaner cowboy coffee!
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Another alternative, similar to cowboy coffee, but a bit more refined is a Turkish style cezve (AKA ibrik). These are usually made of super thin copper and are light enough to pack.
For these you use very finely ground coffee, and boil it very gently until it starts to foam. Then you carefully pour off the coffee from the grounds. Turkish coffee is a great heartstarter of a morning, it's particularly good with a cardamom pod added to the brew and some lokum (turkish delight)
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Indonesian "mud" coffee works fine.
If coffee beans are ground sufficiently fine, you can just put some together with near-boiling water, stir a bit, wait 3-5 minutes and all of the grounds will sink to the bottom.
They really do, if the coffee is ground sufficiently fine.
You just need a cup and the hot water to pour into it. I do this every morning, no need for any equipment beyond your coffee cup and whatever you boil water in.
There will be "mud" at the bottom; either skip the the last few sips if you are squeamish, or when you are at the last quarter of the cup just be aware when you notice a little graininess.
See WikiHow's How to Make Indonesian Kopi Tobruk
Kopi tobruk is coffee prepared in utter simplicity. Indonesian supermarkets sell a wide selection of pre-ground specialty coffees, but your preferred brand of regular grind will do just as well. Sometimes referred to as “mud coffee,” it is one of the most common forms of coffee available in Indonesia. When in Indonesia, knowing how to make your own coffee kopi tobruk is the better alternative to drinking the local instant 3-1 coffees which are sweet or too sweet, or to buying expensive coffee at the fancy coffee shops. Also, it is not uncommon to find a container of ground coffee at the breakfast table of your Indonesian hostel or resort. That's for making kopi tobruk and not for making instant coffee.
Where I live I can buy the finely ground Kapal Api at any Indonesian grocery store. If there's not one around you, just experiment with grinding enough beans for your trip finely and bringing in a plastic bag.
How fine? Very fine. Google "kopi bubuk".
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Similar to @JollyJoker, I tend to make single-cup pour over coffee when backpacking. While I normally buy disposable (read: burnable) single use packs, you can also buy camping specific re-usable pour over contraptions:
- Ultra-light weight nylon filter which can attach to any cup
- Less light weight but more sturdy collapsable filter
Any of these options are nice, because they are very light weight, and all they require besides the filter is hot water and any container you already have. With the reusable filters, you'll just have to remember to grind the beans in advanced.
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I recently improvised this pour over solution while traveling and it's so simple, light, delicious, compostable and cheap, I've been taking it camping.
Bring paper filters and ground coffee, and use a fork, spork or cut a forked twig (which works even better) to keep the filter from collapsing into the cup.
Here I doubled the paper filter to make it stronger, but I've had success with a single filter too (be gentle). You could string it above the cup somehow so you don't have to hold it up and wait at the end of the pour.
Next level on quality: use a hand grinder to grind whole beans just before brewing.
Third level: if you'll be out more than a couple weeks, roast green beans in a dry frying pan or pot.
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If you're an espresso purist you could try a minipresso. They're a hand powered esspresso machine. I was introduced to them by a climbing guide who actually climbed with one and brewed up on top of a pitch.
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The easiest and most reusable method in my opinion is the Moka Pot.
Simply add water and ground beans to the base and heat over a stove or open fire. You end up with espresso in the top compartment. You can now easily regulate strength and temperature by adding hot or cold water. No filters, no bits in the bottom of your cup. Just try not to burn the coffee at the end!
As Michael notes in the comments they are rather lightweight (200g), being made from aluminium and come in a variety of sizes, from 50 ml to 600 ml. A 50 ml can be as small as 10 cm x 6 cm (3" x 2") so is extremely portable.
They can cost as little as £5 online for a small "travel" sized one. For whole beans, buy a hand crank coffee grinder, also cheap at £5! Ahhhh.
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I've used one of these filter holders on top of a thermos, pouring hot water a little at a time. If you don't want to carry a thermos, use a mug.
A largish single-walled mug + one of these and a few filters will probably weigh about as much as the coffee grounds.
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I have used a travel coffee plunger with pre-ground coffee. It worked well (I actually prefer plunger coffee to espresso) but after a couple of trips I decided that the extra bulk wasn't worth it for the nice coffee in the morning. Coffee bags are fine for me.
I have seen people in huts use travel espresso kits similar to this one from GSI. They all raved about them but I did notice the pots took a while to cool down after use, so you couldn't make coffee and leave the hut straight away.
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