I have otter milk flown in from Shetland during winter, but in warmer months I prefer badger milk.Doesn’t actually matter - but it’s got to be unpasteurised yak’s milk..
Drink it black, then it doesnt matter if it gets coldI have in my office a Tassimo machine because I work surrounded by coffee shops, and being unable to resist the temptation of a half decent coffee versus something made with a kettle and instant coffee was proving expensive. I am aware that making coffee with said machine is not very cheap, but it is cheaper than buying the coffee ready made.
My question though is one of physics - how does one best make a coffee that stays warm? For completeness, the equipment I have available is as follows:
1 x kettle
1 x fridge (containing milk)
1 x mini oven
1 x Tassimo-mejig
My question is, will my coffee stay warmer for longer if I add milk to the mug and then get the machine to add the coffee, or if I make the coffee and then add the milk? I tend to think it should be the former as the temperature difference between the hot liquid (coffee and milk mix) will be closer to room temperature from the off, and thus it will fall slower - but can anyone shed any light on how I might do better? Currently my coffee is cold in a matter of minutes.
Yours drinking cold coffee,
K. Up
The question is - milk in before the coffee or after?
I had a filter machine. I ended up drinking far too much coffee as it was there, all the time, keeping warm. It is also a pain to wash one out when you want coffee. At home I use a moka pot. The machine is convenient for work.get tassimo machine
pick up
walk to bin
lift lid
put tassimo machine in bin
go to Argos /John lewis
buy
1) coffee grinder
2) decent filter coffee maker
go to Waitrose/Tesco/Aldi/Supermarket of choice
buy coffee beans of choice - if not sure buy lots and experiment
go back to office
Follow instructions on equipment
pour coffee into warm mug - earthenware not fecking china
add milk /sugar/cream to taste.
Don't forget to minimise the ambient temperature gradient betwixt cup and office: before you go home the night before, whack the air con up to maximum, put it on manual override and set the fans on full blow, get the building like Qatar on a hot summers day before you brew.If you want something to stay at an acceptable temperature for longer you have to get the things you use as hot as possible and then minimise the rate of heat loss
So it's a combination of @Cubist advice to heat stuff up...the cup, the milk, anything.....and then @jefmcg advice to use a thermal mug to reduce the rate of heat loss
I have a Dolce Gusto every morning and I always pour freshly boiled water into the cup first to get the cup as hot as possible
No no no. It is all about heat capacity, not heat retention or shunning of tradition. Heat retention is moot because the heat escapes most from the top, which cannot be stopped unless you put your coffee in a sippy cup.
The heat capacity of a large mug is far to high and will sap half the coffee's temperature within seconds. Of course, if you do as @Cubist suggests, then heat capacity works in your favour. But then you have to heat the cups before making coffee. Also, in that case, the latter designer cup will work better beca
I have to admit to being on the receiving end of Cubist's coffee making show and can confirm he does make a fair cuppa, almost as good as my instant concoctions on a good day. His bacon buttys hit the mark tooI'm sorry, but I use a Gaggia Classic and an Iberital doser grinder. All else is folly.