Your pour-over tastes thin, sour, or weirdly bitter — and you suspect it’s the beans. It’s usually not. Nine times out of ten, the problem is grind size, water temperature, or pour rate. Fix those three, and the same bag suddenly tastes like the café version.
TL;DR
Aim for a 1:16 ratio (e.g., 20 g coffee to 320 g water), water at 94–96°C (200–205°F), and a medium grind that looks like coarse sand. Total brew time: 3:00–3:30 for a single cup. Those three variables drive 80% of the taste.
Prerequisites
You don’t need expensive gear. You need:
- A dripper (V60, Kalita Wave, or Melitta cone — any works)
- Paper filters sized for your dripper
- A burr grinder (hand grinders like the Timemore C2 are fine; blade grinders are not)
- A digital scale that reads to 0.1 g
- A kettle — gooseneck preferred, but a regular kettle and a steady hand work
- A thermometer, or a kettle you can boil and rest for 30 seconds
- Fresh beans (roasted within the last 3–4 weeks)
- Filtered water (not distilled, not straight from a hard tap)
The Three Variables That Matter Most
| Variable | Target | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Ratio | 1:16 (coffee:water) | Controls strength. Lower (1:15) = stronger, higher (1:17) = lighter. |
| Grind | Medium, like coarse sand | Controls extraction speed. Finer = slower, more extracted. |
| Water temp | 94–96°C (200–205°F) | Hotter water pulls more flavor compounds; too cool = sour. |
Water mineral content matters too. Distilled water tastes flat because minerals carry flavor. Use filtered tap water with roughly 50–150 ppm total dissolved solids.
Step-by-Step Brew (20 g coffee, 320 g water)
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Heat 400 g of water to 96°C (205°F). You’ll use 320 g for brewing and the rest to rinse the filter. If your kettle only boils, wait 30 seconds after it clicks off — that drops it to roughly 96°C.
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Rinse the paper filter with hot water. Pour through until the filter is soaked, then discard the water in your carafe. This removes papery taste and preheats the dripper, which keeps brew temperature stable.
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Grind 20 g of beans to a medium setting. The grounds should feel like coarse sea salt or kosher salt between your fingers. Too fine and water stalls; too coarse and water rushes through.
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Add grounds, tare your scale to zero, and start a timer. Give the dripper a gentle shake to level the bed. An uneven bed causes uneven extraction — some grounds over-brew, others under-brew.
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Bloom: pour 40 g of water (2× the coffee weight) over the grounds in a spiral. Stop at 0:00–0:10. Fresh coffee releases CO₂ when wet; that gas blocks water from soaking the grounds. The bloom lets it escape. Wait until 0:45.
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First main pour: from 0:45 to 1:15, slowly pour to 160 g total. Pour in concentric circles starting from the center, avoiding the filter walls. Slow, steady pours extract evenly.
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Second pour: from 1:30 to 2:00, pour to 320 g total. Keep the water level low and consistent — don’t flood the bed.
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Let it drain. Target finish: 3:00–3:30 from the start of the bloom. Swirl the dripper gently once at the end to flatten the bed for an even final draw.
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Remove the dripper, swirl the carafe, and pour. Taste it before adding anything.
Troubleshooting: Taste → Cause → Fix
| Symptom | Likely cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Sour, sharp, lemony | Under-extracted: water didn’t pull enough | Grind finer one notch, OR raise temp to 96°C, OR extend brew by 20 s |
| Bitter, ashy, harsh | Over-extracted: too much pulled out | Grind coarser one notch, OR drop temp to 93°C, OR shorten pour |
| Weak, watery, thin | Wrong ratio or too coarse | Use less water (try 1:15) or grind one step finer |
| Hollow, flat, lifeless | Stale beans or low-mineral water | Use beans within 4 weeks of roast; switch to filtered tap, not distilled |
| Brew finishes under 2:30 | Grind too coarse, or pour too fast | Grind finer; slow your pour rate |
| Brew stalls past 4:00 | Grind too fine, or filter clogged | Grind coarser; agitate less during pour |
Change only one variable per brew. If you tweak grind, temp, and ratio at once, you won’t know what fixed it.
Dialing In: Small Tweaks, Big Difference
Once your baseline brew is drinkable, adjust in small steps:
- Grind: move one notch at a time on your grinder
- Temperature: change in 2°C increments
- Ratio: shift by 10 g of water, not 50 g
Keep a short brew log — beans, grind setting, time, taste. After five brews, the pattern is obvious.
Quick Reference Checklist
- 20 g coffee, 320 g water (1:16)
- Water at 94–96°C
- Medium grind, like coarse sand
- Rinse filter, level bed
- Bloom 40 g, wait to 0:45
- Pour to 160 g by 1:15
- Pour to 320 g by 2:00
- Finish draining by 3:30
- Taste, then adjust ONE variable
Your single next step today: weigh your coffee and water for the next brew. If you only change one thing this week, make it that — guessing by eye is the single biggest reason home pour-over tastes inconsistent.