Cuisinart 12 cup coffee maker - How many grams of ground coffee to make a full strong drip pot?

Cuisinart 12 cup coffee maker - How many grams of ground coffee to make a full strong drip pot? - Barista brewing coffee using chemex method

I just bought a fancy Cuisinart 12 cup machine and some fairly pricey freshly ground coffee.

The machine came with a scoop that is equal to 5 g (1 tsp). The machine advises not to use more than 15 scoops. 75 g (2 ⅔ oz) is a dangerous amount for some reason, probably overflowing or clogging the filter basket.

Anyway, how many scoops of coffee would you recommend to make a full 12 pot?



Best Answer

Normally retailers estimate between 7g and 8g per cup for normal coffee. Try 8g and work your way up. So 12*8=96g for starters.

You might find this article by Harold McGee interesting.

When I dropped the strength close to Mr. Hoffmann’s preferred 1.5 percent by using a third less ground coffee (about 12 grams of coffee to 180 grams, or 6 fluid ounces, of water), the fruity aroma was much more evident, and the flavor generally brighter and more lively. Clarity is a good word for the overall impression.

Edit: Note that I'm talking about espresso cups that are 60ml as opposed to McGee's 180ml cups. Multiply the amount of coffee for the amount of water you are actually using.




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How much coffee grounds do you put in a 12 cup coffee pot?

To fill a standard 12-cup coffeemaker, you will need 12-24 tablespoons (or between 3/4 and 1 1/2 cups) of ground coffee. This will yield 12 6-ounce servings, or about 6 standard 12-ounce mugs of coffee. For a smaller pot, simply scale the ratio down. Since water makes up the majority of coffee, quality matters.

How much coffee grounds do you put in a Cuisinart coffee maker?

Add 1 level scoop of ground coffee per cup. Adjust the amount according to taste. NOTE: The maximum capacity for ground coffee is 15 tablespoons for this coffeemaker. Exceeding this amount may cause overflow if the coffee is too finely ground.

How many grams ground coffee for Pour over?

How much coffee do you use for a pour over? You'll want to use about 29 grams of coffee beans, or about two scoops of coffee beans for a single cup of pour over coffee. You can experiment with more or less coffee to find your perfect amount.

How much ground coffee do you put in a drip coffee maker?

Use 7-8 grams (about a tablespoon) of ground coffee for about every 100-150 ml (about 3.3-5 oz) of water. The amount of coffee can be adjusted to your taste, or to the machine manufacturer's recommendations. Add water and coffee to machine.



How much ground coffee to add when making coffee in a drip brewer.




More answers regarding cuisinart 12 cup coffee maker - How many grams of ground coffee to make a full strong drip pot?

Answer 2

I worked as a coffee roaster for a number of years and met a lot of people. There is a lot of variation to this answer.

What I found works the best is 10-11 g of coffee per 6 oz cup, or 180 mL, so 12 cup maker would be 120 g. Also, the coffee should always be ground to suit the particulars of the brewing method.

Answer 3

Most of these answers are confusing for two reasons: 1. A cup is not a cup when discussing coffee. 2. And measuring coffee grounds by volume introduces too much variability. The recipes should be stated as ratios. I found this ratio on a bag of beans sold by Charleston Coffee Roasters: one gram of coffee per 17 grams of water. I have been using this ratio successfully with my old cheap drip coffee maker. But I just bought a Cuisinart 3200. Using the marks on the carafe I see that 60 ounces equals 12 "cups" or 5 ounces per cup. One ounce of water = 29.57 grams. If a Cuisinart scoop (tablespoon) of coffee is 5 grams, Cuisinart's recipe--one scoop per 5-ounce cup, the ratio is 30 to 1. That's much weaker than the Charleston Coffee Roasters recipe. But it almost works if you hit the Bold button on the Cuisinart 3200. Otherwise for me that recipe produces watery coffee. Bottom line: use weight not volume. Once you find the ratio that gives coffee you like, you can achieve consistent results every time.

Answer 4

The Cuisinart Pot measurement is 5 oz=1 cup. So a full 12 cup pot is 60 oz.

If you are used to an 8 oz cup, the pot will yield 7.5 cups. Coffee standard is 7 or 8 grams per cup of water for normal tasting coffee. At 7 grams per cup, you would be at 52.5 grams of coffee grounds per pot. At 8 grams, you would use 60 grams.

If you are used to a 6 oz cup, the pot will yield 10 cups. Coffee standard is 7 or 8 grams per cup of water for normal tasting coffee. At 7 grams per cup, you would be at 70 grams of coffee grounds per pot. At 8 grams, you would use 80 grams.

Answer 5

So, first, assume that the coffee maker will not brew properly, either with temperature or brew time. In fact, almost 0 home coffee makers brew coffee properly (exception being the technoverm which is rather pricey).

Usually you can assume 1-2 TBSP per 6oz cup of coffee, but this can vary greatly based on grind and your coffee maker. Your best bet is to start with 2TBSP/6 oz cup (so 12 TBSP, or 3/4 cup) for the full 12 cups. Then, if that's too strong or not strong enough, adjust based on your tastes and how the coffee machine brews. Like all tools, every one is a little different so you'll have to play with it to hone in exactly how you like it.

Also, if you switch brands of coffee, expect to repeat the process once again.

Answer 6

100 to 200 grams of coffee for 10 to 12 cups is the average, depending on how fine the grind and what TYPE of grind. If you are using a conical burr grinder then less is better. If you are using a chopping grinder, you may need more. If it is a finer grind, you need to use less. You still have to experiment. To start, use 150 grams per pot of coffee. Then go up and down as needed. Different types of coffee will produce different results even when ground into the same size.

Answer 7

I roast coffee in a bread machine with a heat gun. I roast Kenyan AA to city + and grind the coffee on #2 (fine) in a Cuisinart grinder. I use 60 grams of coffee per 60 oz of water (12 mark on pot, 1800 grams) and it makes an awesome cup of coffee. This is almost half the recommended by SCAA ratio of 1 to 15. it is more like 1 to 30. The Cuisinart 1000 will not take much more grounds of coffee than that with out overflowing. At 75 grams it is the strongest coffee you can get without grinding finer coffee grounds. I measure with the scoop heaped up and put in 6 scoops, and have measured it many times on the scale and it always comes to be around 60 grams.

Note I use the same grind in a pour-over pot. I use 20 to 30 grams (3 heaping scoops) to 16 oz of hot water. this is a 16:1 ratio (480 to 30 grams) and this is the same ratio that the SCAA recommends for specialty coffee. It makes the same strength and brew of coffee as the Cuisinart 1000 above.

Good Brewing to All. SH

Answer 8

As mentioned in the original post, 75 grams of coffee is probably about the most the filter basket will safely hold, and it makes a fairly strong pot.

Here's a chart I made for the Cuisinart DGB-550BK, which is a 12-cup coffee maker that has a built-in grinder. Each "cup" is five fluid ounces, for a total of 60 fl oz when making a full pot. The chart shows the amount of whole beans to use at four different water levels: 6, 8, 10, and 12 cups. The numbers going down the middle of each column are in grams, and the sideways numbers are the amount of ? cup dry measuring scoops. As you can see, measuring by volume isn't as precise as by weight because a level scoop holds around 10 grams, while a heaping scoop holds around 13 grams. Also, maintaining a consistent strength with a scoop requires staying in the middle of the chart where it's bright-yellow (3 scoops for 6 cups, 4 scoops for 8 cups, etc).

coffee to water ratio

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