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- 01 Bypass Cafec Deep 27 Cafeshi Ratio 1:15 Time 2:45 Dose 10g Cafeshi's iced bypass on the Cafec Deep 27. Hot water extracts the bed at filter strength; ice in the carafe drops the temperature without touching the extraction. Body and aromatics survive — none of the watered-down feel. Ratio 1:15 Time 2:45 Dose 10g
- 02 Kasuya 4:6 Cafec Deep 27 Tetsu Kasuya Ratio 1:15 Time 4:00 Dose 15g Kasuya's 4:6 method ported to the Deep 27. Five even centre pours of 45g each, separated by 45 seconds. The first 40% controls sweetness/acidity balance, the last 60% controls strength. Pick the roast on the recipe screen — the water temperature follows. Ratio 1:15 Time 4:00 Dose 15g
- 03 Osmotic Flow Cafec Deep 27 CAFEC Ratio 1:16.7 Time 2:30 Dose 15g Cafec's osmotic flow method for the Deep 27. Continuous center pour creates concentration gradient for even extraction. Ratio 1:16.7 Time 2:30 Dose 15g
- 04 Pulse Brew Cafec Deep 27 CAFEC Ratio 1:17 Time 2:30 Dose 10g Pulsing technique for clarity on the Deep 27. Maintain low water levels to avoid bypass. Ratio 1:17 Time 2:30 Dose 10g
- 05 Standard Cafec Deep 27 CAFEC Ratio 1:16.7 Time 2:30 Dose 15g Standard method for the Deep 27. Clean cup with great aftertaste and body. Ratio 1:16.7 Time 2:30 Dose 15g
- 06 Stir Brew Cafec Deep 27 CAFEC Ratio 1:17 Time 2:30 Dose 10g High agitation method for the Deep 27. Aggressive stirring compensates for fast flow rate. Ratio 1:17 Time 2:30 Dose 10g
- 07 Three Pulse Cafec Deep 27 Onyx Coffee Lab Ratio 1:16 Time 3:30 Dose 15g Onyx's three-pulse approach on the Deep 27. Bloom and three centre pours that climb in roughly equal steps — clean, repeatable, no agitation tricks. Ratio 1:16 Time 3:30 Dose 15g
- 08 Light Roast Cafec Deep 27 CAFEC Ratio 1:16.2 Time 2:45 Dose 13g Cafec's recipe for the Deep 27 single-cup dripper with light roast coffees. The deep cone shape extends contact time, ideal for extracting more from light roasts. Four pulse pours. Ratio 1:16.2 Time 2:45 Dose 13g
- 09 Five Pour Micro Dose Cafec Deep 27 Lance Hedrick Ratio 1:17.5 Time 1:50 Dose 8g Lance Hedrick's micro-brew recipe for the Cafec Deep 27 — when you have leftover beans or want a small extra cup without committing to a full dose. Five small pours with a double bloom and a big middle pour leverage the steep 27° angle to keep the bed deep enough for proper extraction at 8g. Ratio 1:17.5 Time 1:50 Dose 8g
- 10 All-Round Cafec Flower Cup 4 CAFEC Ratio 1:16 Time 3:00 Dose 20g Versatile recipe for the Cafec Flower Dripper Cup 4. The petal-shaped ribs promote airflow for a fast, clean extraction. Works well across all roast levels. Ratio 1:16 Time 3:00 Dose 20g
- 11 Classic Cafec Flower Cup 4 CAFEC Ratio 1:15 Time 3:00 Dose 20g Osmotic flow method for the Flower Cup 4. Flower ribs ensure clean extraction without trapping grounds. Ratio 1:15 Time 3:00 Dose 20g
- 12 Competition Style Cafec Flower Cup 4 CAFEC Ratio 1:16 Time 3:00 Dose 20g Four-pour competition technique scaled up for the Flower Cup 4. Flower petals provide ideal airflow. Ratio 1:16 Time 3:00 Dose 20g
- 13 Dynamic Pour Cafec Flower Cup 4 Kurasu Ratio 1:15.4 Time 2:50 Dose 26g Kurasu's two-cup Flower recipe at 1:15.4. The signature gesture is the speed: each pour goes in over roughly 10 seconds for 80-120g, building agitation that pulls body without grinding finer. Ratio 1:15.4 Time 2:50 Dose 26g
- 14 Light 4:6 Cafec Flower Cup 4 Tetsu Kasuya Ratio 1:15 Time 3:30 Dose 20g Tetsu Kasuya's published light-roast variant of the 4:6 method. Same five-pour timing as the standard 4:6 but with a smaller first pour, shifting the 40% balance toward sweetness and body over brightness. Ratio 1:15 Time 3:30 Dose 20g
- 15 Kasuya 4:6 Cafec Flower Cup 4 Tetsu Kasuya Ratio 1:15 Time 3:30 Dose 20g Tetsu Kasuya's 4:6 method on the Cup 4. Five timed pours of 60g each. The first two define brightness and sweetness; the last three control strength. Pick the roast on the recipe screen — the water temperature follows. Ratio 1:15 Time 3:30 Dose 20g