When making french press coffee, what is the purpose of blooming the grounds?
When making french press coffee, you are often instructed to "bloom" the grounds by adding a small quantity of boiling water, stirring the grounds into a slurry, and then adding the rest of the water.
What I don't understand is... Why?
For clarification, most other situations where you are instructed to bloom something it makes sense to me - cornstarch being added to soup needs to fully hydrate before it hits the hot water to not get clumpy, "active dry" baking yeast needs to dissolve the pellets and start releasing nutrients to the yeast before being diluted in the dough, and gelatin needs to hydrate fully being integrated with other ingredients without clumping. The coffee case seems mysterious to me.
Best Answer
I found a quote from this article
One thing you may not want to do with a press pot, especially a larger model, is use beans roasted less than 2 or 3 days before. What, am I crazy? Nope. There's a problem with ultra fresh beans and it is called "bloom". When beans are only a day or two off the roast, they contain heaps of Co2. Heaps of it, I tell you. That Co2 will translate into a massive bloom of brown suds on top of your press pot, possibly overflowing, but also making it easier for big particulate matter (your ground coffee) to hop and skip over the top of the filter portion when you first apply it. Bloom looks cool, but can make using a press pot more difficult.
The poor filtering part sounds questionable to me, so I googled it and found a few bloom-related comments on this blog post. It seems like some people start timing their soak time only after they see bloom.
This seems like the real reason to me. I know for sure that the air content in ground substances can vary significantly: one cup of flour can contain double the volume of another if one is loosely sifted and the other is compacted. The above quote is accurate about that in my opinion.
Apply this logic to coffee and in order to produce an accurate, general recipe for how long some compounds take to come out of coffee grounds, you need to factor out a variable between coffee grounds: how much air is in the grindings. Maybe the first small pour will saturate with coffee compounds, or drop in temperature quickly, reducing how much it can extract from the grounds. Once it squeezes out all the air, the rest of the water is poured in to do the real extraction work.
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Quick Answer about "When making french press coffee, what is the purpose of blooming the grounds?"
After you place your coffee grounds in the bottom of the press and have your water at the right temperature, it's time to bloom your coffee. Blooming coffee is the act of expressing CO2 from the beans and making them more susceptible to absorbing water. Basically, it enhances the flavor of the coffee.What is the point of blooming coffee?
Allowing your coffee to bloom allows the CO2 to escape, so the remaining water can fully absorb the flavor in the beans. This creates a fresher taste and brings out all of those fun flavor notes that different beans and roasts have to offer.Does blooming coffee matter?
The blooming process enables the trapped carbon dioxide within the structure of the coffee beans to be displaced by the water. If you do not allow the coffee to bloom, the carbon dioxide gas will prevent the complete saturation of the grounds \u2013 the CO2 will repel the water, resulting in thinner brews with less flavor.Blooming coffee in a French press
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Answer 2
'bloom' when it comes to French press is the effect that the grounds collect on top of the water when pouring quickly. Presumably this is because of rapid release of carbon dioxide.
If not stirred into the coffee this 'bloom' will cause the grounds to be partially extracted. When wetting the grounds this bloom occurs prematurely, and the force of pouring the remaining water breaks the grounds apart.
I'd say you get the same effect by stirring after 20 seconds or so. :)
Answer 3
tl;dr answer is: no well-research reason why, or effect More detailed discussion at https://www.reddit.com/r/Coffee/comments/39t5k2/ive_stopped_doing_blooms_for_now/
Dampening grounds before flowing water over them may improve diffusion (pour over) - but that doesn't apply to French Press because the water just sits and soaks in the coffee anyway (which one assumes you've stirred).
Improving diffusion might have a tangible effect for a pour over due to the water having limited contact with coffee as it flows through.
However, a coffee champ seems to think to think it's not important here, either.
https://colinharmon.wordpress.com/2011/03/07/the-bloom/
The first dozen google results on 'blooming coffee effect' describe info like CO2 release, and improved diffusion. If the grounds are homogeneously distributed (stirred to distribute and remove gas), I can't see blooming adding anything.
So, no facts for superior coffee from blooming that I can see. Do some blind testing and make your coffee the way you enjoy it.
Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Images: Los Muertos Crew, Georgi Petrov, Georgi Petrov, Ketut Subiyanto