AeroPress Recipes: Three Methods Worth Trying

The AeroPress is unusual in coffee brewing: it’s cheap ($35), nearly indestructible, and produces consistently good coffee. It’s also the most flexible brewing device I’ve ever used, which is both a strength and an occasionally frustrating source of too many options.

Here are three methods I keep coming back to.

Method 1: The Standard (Inverted)

The inverted method flips the AeroPress upside down during brewing, preventing coffee from dripping through before you’re ready.

  • 15g coffee, medium-fine grind
  • 200ml water at 85°C (185°F)
  • Stir gently for 10 seconds
  • Brew 1:30 total, then flip and press slowly for 30 seconds

Result: clean, balanced, slightly concentrated cup. Good starting point for any bean.

Method 2: The James Hoffman Method

Coffee writer and World Barista Champion James Hoffmann developed a popular standard method that doesn’t use inversion but produces excellent, repeatable results.

  • 11g coffee, medium grind
  • 200ml water at 100°C (boiling)
  • Wait 2 minutes (flat, not inverted)
  • Stir gently 10 times
  • Put cap on, flip, press until hiss (don’t go past it)

Result: surprisingly clean and nuanced. The boiling water is counterintuitive but works because the steep time is short.

Method 3: Concentrate for Americanos

  • 20g coffee, medium-fine grind
  • 60ml water at 92°C
  • Stir, steep 1 minute, press immediately
  • Dilute with 120ml hot water

Result: an Americano-style drink with more clarity and brightness than espresso provides.

My Recommendation

Start with Method 1 until you get consistent results you enjoy. Then try Method 2 if you want to experiment. The AeroPress World Championship (yes, that exists) has documented hundreds of recipes if you want to go deeper — the variation in approaches is genuinely remarkable for such a simple device.