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Is Turkish coffee grinding finer than Espresso grinding?
The Next CEO of Stack OverflowWhy is my espresso salty?Practical home stone grindingIs there a standard measure for coffee grind size?Turkish Coffee necessitiesWhat do I need to know about coffee machines and grinders to get started making good coffee at home?What is the best way to filter Turkish coffee?What is the proper serving temperature for Turkish coffee?What are recommendable coffee roast types for Aeropress?Turkish coffee foamWhy is it necessary for Turkish Coffee to start brewing with cold water?
I am shopping for an electric grinder that can grind to the extremely fine grind of Turkish coffee.
But the only commercially available electric grinders I have found so far refer to Espresso coffee (as if manufacturers never heard of Turkish coffee...)
So it is very tempting for me to settle for an Espresso type of grinder but really what I need is any grinder that could grind at least 8 Oz. of Turkish coffee at a time.
So... my question is simple: Does Turkish coffee grind:
- Finer than Espresso grind?
- Coarser than Espresso grind?
- Same as Espresso grind?
coffee grinding turkish-cuisine
add a comment |
I am shopping for an electric grinder that can grind to the extremely fine grind of Turkish coffee.
But the only commercially available electric grinders I have found so far refer to Espresso coffee (as if manufacturers never heard of Turkish coffee...)
So it is very tempting for me to settle for an Espresso type of grinder but really what I need is any grinder that could grind at least 8 Oz. of Turkish coffee at a time.
So... my question is simple: Does Turkish coffee grind:
- Finer than Espresso grind?
- Coarser than Espresso grind?
- Same as Espresso grind?
coffee grinding turkish-cuisine
4
Turkish coffee is finer than espresso grind. I don't think a regular (cheap) grinder could do it consistently.
– user5561
Mar 3 '13 at 17:41
@user5561 Thanks for this tip. I noticed that the machines in our supermarkets have a "Turkish Coffee" setting, but when I tried it, the result was very disappointing. My el-cheapo Krups grinder grinds finer than that, but it is too small and very inconvenient (too much time scraping the coffee with an especially thin teaspoon).
– Very Objective
Mar 3 '13 at 20:40
add a comment |
I am shopping for an electric grinder that can grind to the extremely fine grind of Turkish coffee.
But the only commercially available electric grinders I have found so far refer to Espresso coffee (as if manufacturers never heard of Turkish coffee...)
So it is very tempting for me to settle for an Espresso type of grinder but really what I need is any grinder that could grind at least 8 Oz. of Turkish coffee at a time.
So... my question is simple: Does Turkish coffee grind:
- Finer than Espresso grind?
- Coarser than Espresso grind?
- Same as Espresso grind?
coffee grinding turkish-cuisine
I am shopping for an electric grinder that can grind to the extremely fine grind of Turkish coffee.
But the only commercially available electric grinders I have found so far refer to Espresso coffee (as if manufacturers never heard of Turkish coffee...)
So it is very tempting for me to settle for an Espresso type of grinder but really what I need is any grinder that could grind at least 8 Oz. of Turkish coffee at a time.
So... my question is simple: Does Turkish coffee grind:
- Finer than Espresso grind?
- Coarser than Espresso grind?
- Same as Espresso grind?
coffee grinding turkish-cuisine
coffee grinding turkish-cuisine
edited Mar 3 '13 at 20:35
Very Objective
asked Mar 3 '13 at 14:53
Very ObjectiveVery Objective
173116
173116
4
Turkish coffee is finer than espresso grind. I don't think a regular (cheap) grinder could do it consistently.
– user5561
Mar 3 '13 at 17:41
@user5561 Thanks for this tip. I noticed that the machines in our supermarkets have a "Turkish Coffee" setting, but when I tried it, the result was very disappointing. My el-cheapo Krups grinder grinds finer than that, but it is too small and very inconvenient (too much time scraping the coffee with an especially thin teaspoon).
– Very Objective
Mar 3 '13 at 20:40
add a comment |
4
Turkish coffee is finer than espresso grind. I don't think a regular (cheap) grinder could do it consistently.
– user5561
Mar 3 '13 at 17:41
@user5561 Thanks for this tip. I noticed that the machines in our supermarkets have a "Turkish Coffee" setting, but when I tried it, the result was very disappointing. My el-cheapo Krups grinder grinds finer than that, but it is too small and very inconvenient (too much time scraping the coffee with an especially thin teaspoon).
– Very Objective
Mar 3 '13 at 20:40
4
4
Turkish coffee is finer than espresso grind. I don't think a regular (cheap) grinder could do it consistently.
– user5561
Mar 3 '13 at 17:41
Turkish coffee is finer than espresso grind. I don't think a regular (cheap) grinder could do it consistently.
– user5561
Mar 3 '13 at 17:41
@user5561 Thanks for this tip. I noticed that the machines in our supermarkets have a "Turkish Coffee" setting, but when I tried it, the result was very disappointing. My el-cheapo Krups grinder grinds finer than that, but it is too small and very inconvenient (too much time scraping the coffee with an especially thin teaspoon).
– Very Objective
Mar 3 '13 at 20:40
@user5561 Thanks for this tip. I noticed that the machines in our supermarkets have a "Turkish Coffee" setting, but when I tried it, the result was very disappointing. My el-cheapo Krups grinder grinds finer than that, but it is too small and very inconvenient (too much time scraping the coffee with an especially thin teaspoon).
– Very Objective
Mar 3 '13 at 20:40
add a comment |
8 Answers
8
active
oldest
votes
Yes Turkish coffee grind is finer than esspresso grind.
Grinders are typically one of two kinds: Blade grinders, or burr mill/grinders. For a consistent turkish coffee or esspresso grind, it's recommended to get a conical burr grinder they can produce the fine grind you need without heating up the coffee and losing flavor. Also, the better ones tend to not 'click' as you adjust the grind size. That way you can calibrate your grinder to the specific bean roast without making big jumps in grind size.
If you are going for the whole 8 oz, i'd recommend giving the grinder a break to cool down part way and prevent the grind from getting too hot and essentially roasting again.
Thanks! I will probably be going for this Conical Burr Grinder since it explicitly mentions Turkish coffee as one of its settings.
– Very Objective
Mar 10 '13 at 0:14
Reporting results: I first fell for this Cuisinart® Supreme Grind™ Automatic Burr Mill because my local store didn't have Capress's model 560 in stock. This turned to be totally inadequate for Turkish coffee. Too coarse. To noisy. And reviews also claim that it breaks within months...
– Very Objective
Mar 21 '13 at 4:33
1
I then returned it and the store offered that the Capresso Infinity 560 be shipped to my home. What an exquisite experience. Indeed, as it claims, it grinds to the finest level of Turkish coffee I have been used to. I am delighted!
– Very Objective
Mar 21 '13 at 4:36
@VeryObjective oh I've worked with that Cuisinart. It's wholly inconsistent, and big jumps on the dial. Glad you found one that works for you.
– MandoMando
Mar 21 '13 at 13:33
add a comment |
Turkish coffee requires an extremely fine, powdery, flour-like grind, which is much finer than even a very finely grinding espresso grinder will produce. Grinding 8 oz quantities at a go really requires a commercial grinder, and even those, like the BUNN, require fitting with burrs designed for Turkish coffee. Commercial grinders will have heavier-duty motors capable of turning larger burrs that will both grind the coffee to the required fineness but also have enough mass to avoid overheating and affecting the taste of the ground product.
add a comment |
Turkish coffee requires a stone mill. Not a burr mill. A stone mill, like the one that is used for making flour. It is rather expensive, very heavy and hard to find in countries where Turkish coffee is not popular (as in Turkey itself, Hellas and Arab countries). A burr mill, even a professional one with conical burrs, needs to be pushed to its very limits in order to make somewhat acceptable (drinkable) Turkish coffee.
add a comment |
An old discussion, but others will come, as I just did, via a search. Grinding coffee very fine, to powder, as required for Turkish coffee, requires more torque than is available with home grinders; heavy-duty commercial grinders will do the job. If you don't want an expensive and large grinder, either buy coffee ready-ground for Turkish (keep it hermetically sealed in the freezer), or use a Turkish hand grinder; they are not expensive. Zassenhaus do a similar hand grinder, the Havanna (probably the only suitable Zassenhaus model), at a much higher price. I use a Turkish one; it works fine, but is laborious. I hear that some people grind coffee in a standard grinder, then regrind it in a Turkish mill so it requires much less effort.
add a comment |
Yes, it has to be finer. For example I recently had to use a combination of a Breville BCG450 conical burr grinder and a cheap blade mill to get it the right way. When the result is too fine for espresso, it is just right for Turkish .
1
Dear Kevin, I understand that you want to contribute, but we are not a discussion forum. We are a question-and-answer site, and new posts are expected to address the question literally. I had to edit your post considerably, because it got two flags as not being an answer.
– rumtscho♦
Mar 21 '14 at 14:24
add a comment |
Yes, unfortunately, I have not encountered a grinder that can grind the coffee beans fine enough for Turkish coffee. It is perhaps more accurate to call it "to pound" instead of "to grind" when it comes to Turkish coffee. I think the best device for it is a mortar, a hand mill could als work.
add a comment |
I have an expensive electric conical burr mill (from Cusineart) but for Turkish, I use my hand grinder. As I am currently writing this in a Starbucks in the US, I asked one of the Baristas here and their grinders are from Europe and have a Turkish setting on them. So I would advise, get a Turkish hand grinder or buy some beans from Starbucks and let them figure it out. - Kameal
add a comment |
Unless you're running a busy restaurant you probably shouldn't be grinding more than one or two cups worth of beans.
The best is the manual Sozen grinder made in Turkey. Make sure you buy one for coffee not spices. I bought one on Ebay from Turkey several years ago. It's still delivering consistent fine grind.
New contributor
add a comment |
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8 Answers
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active
oldest
votes
8 Answers
8
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Yes Turkish coffee grind is finer than esspresso grind.
Grinders are typically one of two kinds: Blade grinders, or burr mill/grinders. For a consistent turkish coffee or esspresso grind, it's recommended to get a conical burr grinder they can produce the fine grind you need without heating up the coffee and losing flavor. Also, the better ones tend to not 'click' as you adjust the grind size. That way you can calibrate your grinder to the specific bean roast without making big jumps in grind size.
If you are going for the whole 8 oz, i'd recommend giving the grinder a break to cool down part way and prevent the grind from getting too hot and essentially roasting again.
Thanks! I will probably be going for this Conical Burr Grinder since it explicitly mentions Turkish coffee as one of its settings.
– Very Objective
Mar 10 '13 at 0:14
Reporting results: I first fell for this Cuisinart® Supreme Grind™ Automatic Burr Mill because my local store didn't have Capress's model 560 in stock. This turned to be totally inadequate for Turkish coffee. Too coarse. To noisy. And reviews also claim that it breaks within months...
– Very Objective
Mar 21 '13 at 4:33
1
I then returned it and the store offered that the Capresso Infinity 560 be shipped to my home. What an exquisite experience. Indeed, as it claims, it grinds to the finest level of Turkish coffee I have been used to. I am delighted!
– Very Objective
Mar 21 '13 at 4:36
@VeryObjective oh I've worked with that Cuisinart. It's wholly inconsistent, and big jumps on the dial. Glad you found one that works for you.
– MandoMando
Mar 21 '13 at 13:33
add a comment |
Yes Turkish coffee grind is finer than esspresso grind.
Grinders are typically one of two kinds: Blade grinders, or burr mill/grinders. For a consistent turkish coffee or esspresso grind, it's recommended to get a conical burr grinder they can produce the fine grind you need without heating up the coffee and losing flavor. Also, the better ones tend to not 'click' as you adjust the grind size. That way you can calibrate your grinder to the specific bean roast without making big jumps in grind size.
If you are going for the whole 8 oz, i'd recommend giving the grinder a break to cool down part way and prevent the grind from getting too hot and essentially roasting again.
Thanks! I will probably be going for this Conical Burr Grinder since it explicitly mentions Turkish coffee as one of its settings.
– Very Objective
Mar 10 '13 at 0:14
Reporting results: I first fell for this Cuisinart® Supreme Grind™ Automatic Burr Mill because my local store didn't have Capress's model 560 in stock. This turned to be totally inadequate for Turkish coffee. Too coarse. To noisy. And reviews also claim that it breaks within months...
– Very Objective
Mar 21 '13 at 4:33
1
I then returned it and the store offered that the Capresso Infinity 560 be shipped to my home. What an exquisite experience. Indeed, as it claims, it grinds to the finest level of Turkish coffee I have been used to. I am delighted!
– Very Objective
Mar 21 '13 at 4:36
@VeryObjective oh I've worked with that Cuisinart. It's wholly inconsistent, and big jumps on the dial. Glad you found one that works for you.
– MandoMando
Mar 21 '13 at 13:33
add a comment |
Yes Turkish coffee grind is finer than esspresso grind.
Grinders are typically one of two kinds: Blade grinders, or burr mill/grinders. For a consistent turkish coffee or esspresso grind, it's recommended to get a conical burr grinder they can produce the fine grind you need without heating up the coffee and losing flavor. Also, the better ones tend to not 'click' as you adjust the grind size. That way you can calibrate your grinder to the specific bean roast without making big jumps in grind size.
If you are going for the whole 8 oz, i'd recommend giving the grinder a break to cool down part way and prevent the grind from getting too hot and essentially roasting again.
Yes Turkish coffee grind is finer than esspresso grind.
Grinders are typically one of two kinds: Blade grinders, or burr mill/grinders. For a consistent turkish coffee or esspresso grind, it's recommended to get a conical burr grinder they can produce the fine grind you need without heating up the coffee and losing flavor. Also, the better ones tend to not 'click' as you adjust the grind size. That way you can calibrate your grinder to the specific bean roast without making big jumps in grind size.
If you are going for the whole 8 oz, i'd recommend giving the grinder a break to cool down part way and prevent the grind from getting too hot and essentially roasting again.
answered Mar 4 '13 at 4:32
MandoMandoMandoMando
8,47062153
8,47062153
Thanks! I will probably be going for this Conical Burr Grinder since it explicitly mentions Turkish coffee as one of its settings.
– Very Objective
Mar 10 '13 at 0:14
Reporting results: I first fell for this Cuisinart® Supreme Grind™ Automatic Burr Mill because my local store didn't have Capress's model 560 in stock. This turned to be totally inadequate for Turkish coffee. Too coarse. To noisy. And reviews also claim that it breaks within months...
– Very Objective
Mar 21 '13 at 4:33
1
I then returned it and the store offered that the Capresso Infinity 560 be shipped to my home. What an exquisite experience. Indeed, as it claims, it grinds to the finest level of Turkish coffee I have been used to. I am delighted!
– Very Objective
Mar 21 '13 at 4:36
@VeryObjective oh I've worked with that Cuisinart. It's wholly inconsistent, and big jumps on the dial. Glad you found one that works for you.
– MandoMando
Mar 21 '13 at 13:33
add a comment |
Thanks! I will probably be going for this Conical Burr Grinder since it explicitly mentions Turkish coffee as one of its settings.
– Very Objective
Mar 10 '13 at 0:14
Reporting results: I first fell for this Cuisinart® Supreme Grind™ Automatic Burr Mill because my local store didn't have Capress's model 560 in stock. This turned to be totally inadequate for Turkish coffee. Too coarse. To noisy. And reviews also claim that it breaks within months...
– Very Objective
Mar 21 '13 at 4:33
1
I then returned it and the store offered that the Capresso Infinity 560 be shipped to my home. What an exquisite experience. Indeed, as it claims, it grinds to the finest level of Turkish coffee I have been used to. I am delighted!
– Very Objective
Mar 21 '13 at 4:36
@VeryObjective oh I've worked with that Cuisinart. It's wholly inconsistent, and big jumps on the dial. Glad you found one that works for you.
– MandoMando
Mar 21 '13 at 13:33
Thanks! I will probably be going for this Conical Burr Grinder since it explicitly mentions Turkish coffee as one of its settings.
– Very Objective
Mar 10 '13 at 0:14
Thanks! I will probably be going for this Conical Burr Grinder since it explicitly mentions Turkish coffee as one of its settings.
– Very Objective
Mar 10 '13 at 0:14
Reporting results: I first fell for this Cuisinart® Supreme Grind™ Automatic Burr Mill because my local store didn't have Capress's model 560 in stock. This turned to be totally inadequate for Turkish coffee. Too coarse. To noisy. And reviews also claim that it breaks within months...
– Very Objective
Mar 21 '13 at 4:33
Reporting results: I first fell for this Cuisinart® Supreme Grind™ Automatic Burr Mill because my local store didn't have Capress's model 560 in stock. This turned to be totally inadequate for Turkish coffee. Too coarse. To noisy. And reviews also claim that it breaks within months...
– Very Objective
Mar 21 '13 at 4:33
1
1
I then returned it and the store offered that the Capresso Infinity 560 be shipped to my home. What an exquisite experience. Indeed, as it claims, it grinds to the finest level of Turkish coffee I have been used to. I am delighted!
– Very Objective
Mar 21 '13 at 4:36
I then returned it and the store offered that the Capresso Infinity 560 be shipped to my home. What an exquisite experience. Indeed, as it claims, it grinds to the finest level of Turkish coffee I have been used to. I am delighted!
– Very Objective
Mar 21 '13 at 4:36
@VeryObjective oh I've worked with that Cuisinart. It's wholly inconsistent, and big jumps on the dial. Glad you found one that works for you.
– MandoMando
Mar 21 '13 at 13:33
@VeryObjective oh I've worked with that Cuisinart. It's wholly inconsistent, and big jumps on the dial. Glad you found one that works for you.
– MandoMando
Mar 21 '13 at 13:33
add a comment |
Turkish coffee requires an extremely fine, powdery, flour-like grind, which is much finer than even a very finely grinding espresso grinder will produce. Grinding 8 oz quantities at a go really requires a commercial grinder, and even those, like the BUNN, require fitting with burrs designed for Turkish coffee. Commercial grinders will have heavier-duty motors capable of turning larger burrs that will both grind the coffee to the required fineness but also have enough mass to avoid overheating and affecting the taste of the ground product.
add a comment |
Turkish coffee requires an extremely fine, powdery, flour-like grind, which is much finer than even a very finely grinding espresso grinder will produce. Grinding 8 oz quantities at a go really requires a commercial grinder, and even those, like the BUNN, require fitting with burrs designed for Turkish coffee. Commercial grinders will have heavier-duty motors capable of turning larger burrs that will both grind the coffee to the required fineness but also have enough mass to avoid overheating and affecting the taste of the ground product.
add a comment |
Turkish coffee requires an extremely fine, powdery, flour-like grind, which is much finer than even a very finely grinding espresso grinder will produce. Grinding 8 oz quantities at a go really requires a commercial grinder, and even those, like the BUNN, require fitting with burrs designed for Turkish coffee. Commercial grinders will have heavier-duty motors capable of turning larger burrs that will both grind the coffee to the required fineness but also have enough mass to avoid overheating and affecting the taste of the ground product.
Turkish coffee requires an extremely fine, powdery, flour-like grind, which is much finer than even a very finely grinding espresso grinder will produce. Grinding 8 oz quantities at a go really requires a commercial grinder, and even those, like the BUNN, require fitting with burrs designed for Turkish coffee. Commercial grinders will have heavier-duty motors capable of turning larger burrs that will both grind the coffee to the required fineness but also have enough mass to avoid overheating and affecting the taste of the ground product.
answered Mar 26 '13 at 3:18
beetlesbeetles
311
311
add a comment |
add a comment |
Turkish coffee requires a stone mill. Not a burr mill. A stone mill, like the one that is used for making flour. It is rather expensive, very heavy and hard to find in countries where Turkish coffee is not popular (as in Turkey itself, Hellas and Arab countries). A burr mill, even a professional one with conical burrs, needs to be pushed to its very limits in order to make somewhat acceptable (drinkable) Turkish coffee.
add a comment |
Turkish coffee requires a stone mill. Not a burr mill. A stone mill, like the one that is used for making flour. It is rather expensive, very heavy and hard to find in countries where Turkish coffee is not popular (as in Turkey itself, Hellas and Arab countries). A burr mill, even a professional one with conical burrs, needs to be pushed to its very limits in order to make somewhat acceptable (drinkable) Turkish coffee.
add a comment |
Turkish coffee requires a stone mill. Not a burr mill. A stone mill, like the one that is used for making flour. It is rather expensive, very heavy and hard to find in countries where Turkish coffee is not popular (as in Turkey itself, Hellas and Arab countries). A burr mill, even a professional one with conical burrs, needs to be pushed to its very limits in order to make somewhat acceptable (drinkable) Turkish coffee.
Turkish coffee requires a stone mill. Not a burr mill. A stone mill, like the one that is used for making flour. It is rather expensive, very heavy and hard to find in countries where Turkish coffee is not popular (as in Turkey itself, Hellas and Arab countries). A burr mill, even a professional one with conical burrs, needs to be pushed to its very limits in order to make somewhat acceptable (drinkable) Turkish coffee.
answered Mar 28 '16 at 13:22
DenisDenis
211
211
add a comment |
add a comment |
An old discussion, but others will come, as I just did, via a search. Grinding coffee very fine, to powder, as required for Turkish coffee, requires more torque than is available with home grinders; heavy-duty commercial grinders will do the job. If you don't want an expensive and large grinder, either buy coffee ready-ground for Turkish (keep it hermetically sealed in the freezer), or use a Turkish hand grinder; they are not expensive. Zassenhaus do a similar hand grinder, the Havanna (probably the only suitable Zassenhaus model), at a much higher price. I use a Turkish one; it works fine, but is laborious. I hear that some people grind coffee in a standard grinder, then regrind it in a Turkish mill so it requires much less effort.
add a comment |
An old discussion, but others will come, as I just did, via a search. Grinding coffee very fine, to powder, as required for Turkish coffee, requires more torque than is available with home grinders; heavy-duty commercial grinders will do the job. If you don't want an expensive and large grinder, either buy coffee ready-ground for Turkish (keep it hermetically sealed in the freezer), or use a Turkish hand grinder; they are not expensive. Zassenhaus do a similar hand grinder, the Havanna (probably the only suitable Zassenhaus model), at a much higher price. I use a Turkish one; it works fine, but is laborious. I hear that some people grind coffee in a standard grinder, then regrind it in a Turkish mill so it requires much less effort.
add a comment |
An old discussion, but others will come, as I just did, via a search. Grinding coffee very fine, to powder, as required for Turkish coffee, requires more torque than is available with home grinders; heavy-duty commercial grinders will do the job. If you don't want an expensive and large grinder, either buy coffee ready-ground for Turkish (keep it hermetically sealed in the freezer), or use a Turkish hand grinder; they are not expensive. Zassenhaus do a similar hand grinder, the Havanna (probably the only suitable Zassenhaus model), at a much higher price. I use a Turkish one; it works fine, but is laborious. I hear that some people grind coffee in a standard grinder, then regrind it in a Turkish mill so it requires much less effort.
An old discussion, but others will come, as I just did, via a search. Grinding coffee very fine, to powder, as required for Turkish coffee, requires more torque than is available with home grinders; heavy-duty commercial grinders will do the job. If you don't want an expensive and large grinder, either buy coffee ready-ground for Turkish (keep it hermetically sealed in the freezer), or use a Turkish hand grinder; they are not expensive. Zassenhaus do a similar hand grinder, the Havanna (probably the only suitable Zassenhaus model), at a much higher price. I use a Turkish one; it works fine, but is laborious. I hear that some people grind coffee in a standard grinder, then regrind it in a Turkish mill so it requires much less effort.
answered Aug 11 '18 at 17:44
pol098pol098
111
111
add a comment |
add a comment |
Yes, it has to be finer. For example I recently had to use a combination of a Breville BCG450 conical burr grinder and a cheap blade mill to get it the right way. When the result is too fine for espresso, it is just right for Turkish .
1
Dear Kevin, I understand that you want to contribute, but we are not a discussion forum. We are a question-and-answer site, and new posts are expected to address the question literally. I had to edit your post considerably, because it got two flags as not being an answer.
– rumtscho♦
Mar 21 '14 at 14:24
add a comment |
Yes, it has to be finer. For example I recently had to use a combination of a Breville BCG450 conical burr grinder and a cheap blade mill to get it the right way. When the result is too fine for espresso, it is just right for Turkish .
1
Dear Kevin, I understand that you want to contribute, but we are not a discussion forum. We are a question-and-answer site, and new posts are expected to address the question literally. I had to edit your post considerably, because it got two flags as not being an answer.
– rumtscho♦
Mar 21 '14 at 14:24
add a comment |
Yes, it has to be finer. For example I recently had to use a combination of a Breville BCG450 conical burr grinder and a cheap blade mill to get it the right way. When the result is too fine for espresso, it is just right for Turkish .
Yes, it has to be finer. For example I recently had to use a combination of a Breville BCG450 conical burr grinder and a cheap blade mill to get it the right way. When the result is too fine for espresso, it is just right for Turkish .
edited Mar 21 '14 at 14:26
rumtscho♦
82.7k28191357
82.7k28191357
answered Mar 21 '14 at 1:38
Kevin CroughKevin Crough
11
11
1
Dear Kevin, I understand that you want to contribute, but we are not a discussion forum. We are a question-and-answer site, and new posts are expected to address the question literally. I had to edit your post considerably, because it got two flags as not being an answer.
– rumtscho♦
Mar 21 '14 at 14:24
add a comment |
1
Dear Kevin, I understand that you want to contribute, but we are not a discussion forum. We are a question-and-answer site, and new posts are expected to address the question literally. I had to edit your post considerably, because it got two flags as not being an answer.
– rumtscho♦
Mar 21 '14 at 14:24
1
1
Dear Kevin, I understand that you want to contribute, but we are not a discussion forum. We are a question-and-answer site, and new posts are expected to address the question literally. I had to edit your post considerably, because it got two flags as not being an answer.
– rumtscho♦
Mar 21 '14 at 14:24
Dear Kevin, I understand that you want to contribute, but we are not a discussion forum. We are a question-and-answer site, and new posts are expected to address the question literally. I had to edit your post considerably, because it got two flags as not being an answer.
– rumtscho♦
Mar 21 '14 at 14:24
add a comment |
Yes, unfortunately, I have not encountered a grinder that can grind the coffee beans fine enough for Turkish coffee. It is perhaps more accurate to call it "to pound" instead of "to grind" when it comes to Turkish coffee. I think the best device for it is a mortar, a hand mill could als work.
add a comment |
Yes, unfortunately, I have not encountered a grinder that can grind the coffee beans fine enough for Turkish coffee. It is perhaps more accurate to call it "to pound" instead of "to grind" when it comes to Turkish coffee. I think the best device for it is a mortar, a hand mill could als work.
add a comment |
Yes, unfortunately, I have not encountered a grinder that can grind the coffee beans fine enough for Turkish coffee. It is perhaps more accurate to call it "to pound" instead of "to grind" when it comes to Turkish coffee. I think the best device for it is a mortar, a hand mill could als work.
Yes, unfortunately, I have not encountered a grinder that can grind the coffee beans fine enough for Turkish coffee. It is perhaps more accurate to call it "to pound" instead of "to grind" when it comes to Turkish coffee. I think the best device for it is a mortar, a hand mill could als work.
answered Oct 11 '14 at 10:50
Ahmed EminAhmed Emin
1
1
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I have an expensive electric conical burr mill (from Cusineart) but for Turkish, I use my hand grinder. As I am currently writing this in a Starbucks in the US, I asked one of the Baristas here and their grinders are from Europe and have a Turkish setting on them. So I would advise, get a Turkish hand grinder or buy some beans from Starbucks and let them figure it out. - Kameal
add a comment |
I have an expensive electric conical burr mill (from Cusineart) but for Turkish, I use my hand grinder. As I am currently writing this in a Starbucks in the US, I asked one of the Baristas here and their grinders are from Europe and have a Turkish setting on them. So I would advise, get a Turkish hand grinder or buy some beans from Starbucks and let them figure it out. - Kameal
add a comment |
I have an expensive electric conical burr mill (from Cusineart) but for Turkish, I use my hand grinder. As I am currently writing this in a Starbucks in the US, I asked one of the Baristas here and their grinders are from Europe and have a Turkish setting on them. So I would advise, get a Turkish hand grinder or buy some beans from Starbucks and let them figure it out. - Kameal
I have an expensive electric conical burr mill (from Cusineart) but for Turkish, I use my hand grinder. As I am currently writing this in a Starbucks in the US, I asked one of the Baristas here and their grinders are from Europe and have a Turkish setting on them. So I would advise, get a Turkish hand grinder or buy some beans from Starbucks and let them figure it out. - Kameal
answered Feb 4 at 14:58
Kameal CelesteeKameal Celestee
1
1
add a comment |
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Unless you're running a busy restaurant you probably shouldn't be grinding more than one or two cups worth of beans.
The best is the manual Sozen grinder made in Turkey. Make sure you buy one for coffee not spices. I bought one on Ebay from Turkey several years ago. It's still delivering consistent fine grind.
New contributor
add a comment |
Unless you're running a busy restaurant you probably shouldn't be grinding more than one or two cups worth of beans.
The best is the manual Sozen grinder made in Turkey. Make sure you buy one for coffee not spices. I bought one on Ebay from Turkey several years ago. It's still delivering consistent fine grind.
New contributor
add a comment |
Unless you're running a busy restaurant you probably shouldn't be grinding more than one or two cups worth of beans.
The best is the manual Sozen grinder made in Turkey. Make sure you buy one for coffee not spices. I bought one on Ebay from Turkey several years ago. It's still delivering consistent fine grind.
New contributor
Unless you're running a busy restaurant you probably shouldn't be grinding more than one or two cups worth of beans.
The best is the manual Sozen grinder made in Turkey. Make sure you buy one for coffee not spices. I bought one on Ebay from Turkey several years ago. It's still delivering consistent fine grind.
New contributor
New contributor
answered 50 secs ago
WCMertonWCMerton
1
1
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
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Turkish coffee is finer than espresso grind. I don't think a regular (cheap) grinder could do it consistently.
– user5561
Mar 3 '13 at 17:41
@user5561 Thanks for this tip. I noticed that the machines in our supermarkets have a "Turkish Coffee" setting, but when I tried it, the result was very disappointing. My el-cheapo Krups grinder grinds finer than that, but it is too small and very inconvenient (too much time scraping the coffee with an especially thin teaspoon).
– Very Objective
Mar 3 '13 at 20:40