Buying & budget

What coffee for a filter machine?

For a filter brewer — electric drip, batch brew or pour-over like V60 — the ideal coffee is a washed or honey single origin, medium to medium-light roast, medium grind, 14-16 g per 250 ml. Ethiopia, Kenya, high-altitude Colombia and Costa Rica deliver the aromatic clarity that filter reveals without apology.

Filter is the method that lets terroir speak most clearly. Water moves through a coffee bed in 3 to 6 minutes depending on the brewer, hitting a final TDS around 1.2-1.4 % and an extraction yield of 18-22 %. That long, diluted brew reveals every floral, fruity and acidic note that would hide under espresso crema. The rule, then, is simple: pick coffees that actually have something to tell. A washed Ethiopian Yirgacheffe or Guji shows citrus, bergamot and jasmine; a Kenyan AA from Nyeri unfolds tomato, blackcurrant and cane sugar; a washed Colombian Huila balances chocolate and red fruit; a Costa Rican Tarrazú honey adds honey, baked apple and brioche.

Filter-friendly roasts sit lighter than espresso. A medium-light roast developed just past first crack (drop temperature 200-210 °C) preserves acidity, fermentable sugars and aromatic complexity. A dark roast in filter turns the cup flat, ashy and bitter, because the long brew fully extracts roast bitterness. In Belgium, specialty micro-roasters often maintain two separate lines — 'espresso' in medium-dark and 'filter' in medium-light — on intentionally different lots.

The freshness window in filter is tighter than in espresso: ideally 7 to 30 days post-roast. Unlike espresso, which benefits from longer degassing to stabilise the crema, filter catches fresh aromatics from day 5-7. Past 35-40 days, the cup loses liveliness, florals fade and a papery sensation appears.

Brew ratio is the last lever. SCA recommends 60 g/L — 18 g for 300 ml or 30 g for 500 ml. A household electric drip with 12 cups holds about 1.5 L of water, meaning roughly 90 g of coffee; a 250 g bag covers three full brews. Buying 500 g makes sense for family use, while single-cup V60 users stay on 250 g to preserve freshness.

Picking a coffee for filter brewers

CriterionRecommendedTo avoid
Typical originEthiopia, Kenya, Colombia, Costa RicaDark espresso blend
ProcessWashed or honeyHeavily fermented natural
RoastMedium-light / mediumDark roast
Age7-30 days< 5 d or > 45 d
GrindMedium (coarse sand)Espresso fine or French press coarse
Ratio60 g/L (SCA)Below 50 g/L (weak cup)
Format250 g or 500 g by pace1 kg that ages at the bottom