The coffee roasters I work with told me about the coffee scrub trick, and I've actually used it pretty regularly for a quick hand scrub! Softest skin ever lol! Great vid bro!
Love the video, so natural and super informative! I’m definitely down for the grounds in the soil, did use the scrub technic, loved it esp. before jumping into a salty ocean, and still awaiting the opportunity to eat the rum infused coffee ice cream ...what!!!!!
Hi Brodie! This is the video that I needed to watch! My coffee grounds are piling up and looking for ways to repurpose, reuse, or recycle them. Thanks!
@@BrodieVissers True. I found out recently that some Japanese uses coffee as an ingredient for their famous coco curry sauce. This is big deal for me as I love Coco Ichibanya's curry.
@@BrodieVissers yup, my in-law who were stationed in Japan craved for an authentic Japanese curry, he tried this instructional vid by a Japanese mother. The ingredients list is at 0:32 of her video ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-j6ClM5w96cE.html
I haven't ever got into the fancy coffees. But I've been drinking maxwell house for almost ten years now, and I never get a bad cup. That's one of the main reasons why I'm hesitant to try different coffees, what if I buy a crappy coffee? Now I gotta drink a whole bag of crappy coffee
This is a great little video. Kudos sir. Shoutouts to local coffee as well. Have you tried Tamp Coffee's offerings of espresso and single origin? Social does their roasting, very very nice coffee.
add a teaspoon of baking soda to the coffee ground water when dying paper or wool - this will lower the pH closer to neutral and will prevent your material from rapidly decaying from the acidity in the coffee.
In the beginning of your video you poured water over white and stainless coffee contraption. Please forgive the ignorance and wording. I am new to all of this. Great video. I definitely subscribed. I’m heading over to binge watch while I wait on reply. Thank you so much for sharing. 🤍
Hey, thanks for asking! This is actually a pour-over coffee method. You may see it again in some of my other videos. It's basically like a classic American electric coffee maker method, but "poured over" by hand, hence the name. I hope you can try it yourself someday!
Sure, you could dry it out, put it in a spice grinder, or back on fine setting in coffee grinder to get a really fine grind. make sure it's very dry though.