Coffee Emergency: Quick Cheat Sheet for Ratios, Grinding, and Time

Coffee Emergency: Quick Cheat Sheet for Ratios, Grinding, and Time

You're standing in the kitchen, the water in the kettle is already "clicking," and suddenly your mind goes blank: How much of this should I pour? Don't worry, we've all been there. Instead of leafing through bulky manuals, use this short cheat sheet. Pure facts, no fluff (except for the coffee water).


βš–οΈ 1. Proportions (Ratio)

The specialty golden standard is 6g of coffee for every 100ml (3.4 oz) of water. This is your base – if the coffee is too strong or too weak, start by adjusting up or down by 0.5g.

I want to brew: How many grams of coffee?
A cup (150 ml / 5 oz) 9 g
Standard mug (250 ml / 8.5 oz) 15 g
Large mug / AeroPress (300 ml / 10 oz) 18 g
V60 Drip / Server (500 ml / 17 oz) 30 g

βš™οΈ 2. Grinding and Time

Grind size is your most important "slider" for flavor. Visually compare the grounds to products in your kitchen cabinet.

Method Grind Size Brewing Time
Moka Pot Fine (table salt) Until light foam flows out
AeroPress Fine / Medium 1:45 – 2:15 min
V60 Drip Medium (granulated sugar) 2:30 – 3:15 min
French Press Coarse (sea salt) 4:00 min + 5 min wait

πŸ’§ 3. Water and Temperature

Remember: boiling water is the enemy of sweetness.

  • Water: Always filtered (Brita/Dafi pitcher or spring water).
  • Temperature:
    • Light roast (fruity, citrusy): 93Β°C – 96Β°C (200Β°F – 205Β°F) (wait 1 min after boiling).
    • Dark roast (nutty, chocolatey): 88Β°C – 92Β°C (190Β°F – 198Β°F) (wait approx. 3 min after boiling).

πŸ” 4. Quick Flavor Diagnosis

The coffee is already in the mug, you take the first sip and... something's off? Correct it on your next attempt:

What do you taste? Diagnosis Solution (change only 1 thing!)
Very sour, salty Under-extracted Grind finer / use hotter water
Bitter, dry on the tongue Over-extracted Grind coarser / use cooler water
Watery, "sad" Wrong proportions Add 1-2g more coffee
Too intense, heavy Too much coffee Use slightly more water (dilute)

πŸ’‘ Pro-tip for the start

If your coffee tastes "flat" despite good beans and you're using tap water – that's the problem. Filtered water is the cheapest and fastest "upgrade" for your home cafe.

πŸ‘‰ Want to go deeper into the coffee world? Check out our step-by-step guide: Beginner's Path.


Cheat sheet not enough? Analyze our Big Map of Mistakes.

Remember the fundamentals: Is your water ruining the taste?.