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French Press
Brew Guide

9 min read Beginner to Intermediate Updated May 2026

The French Press is the brewer most people start with and the one most people are using wrong. Get it right and it produces one of the richest, most satisfying cups in manual brewing. Get it wrong and you get a bitter, muddy, over-extracted mess.

Also known as a cafetiere or press pot, the French Press was patented in its modern form by Italian designer Attilio Calimani in 1929. It works through full immersion: coarsely ground coffee steeps directly in hot water for several minutes before a metal mesh plunger is pressed down to separate the grounds from the brew. No paper filter, no drip, no pressure. Just coffee and water, together, for exactly as long as you decide.

That simplicity is both its greatest strength and its biggest challenge. Without a paper filter to catch oils and fine particles, everything ends up in your cup. The French Press rewards coarse, even grinding and precise timing more than almost any other home brew method.

Immersion Brewing Explained

Most brew methods use percolation: water passes through a bed of coffee once and drains away. The French Press uses full immersion: grounds and water stay in contact for the entire brew time before separation. This fundamental difference produces a very different cup.

Because the grounds steep in the water rather than being rinsed by it, the French Press extracts more oils, sugars, and heavier compounds from the coffee. The result is a full-bodied, rich cup with more texture and weight on the palate than a pour over or AeroPress. You will also get some fine sediment at the bottom of your cup , this is normal and is part of the French Press character.

The metal mesh filter does not trap oils or micro-fines the way paper does. This is what gives French Press coffee its distinctive mouthfeel. If you prefer a cleaner, brighter cup, the Chemex or V60 are better choices. If you want richness, body, and depth , the French Press delivers that better than almost anything else.

Percolation
Pour Over / Drip
  • Water passes through grounds once
  • Paper filter removes oils and fines
  • Clean, bright, transparent cup
  • Extraction controlled by pour rate
  • Less body, more clarity
Full Immersion
French Press
  • Grounds steep in water for full duration
  • Metal filter keeps oils and texture
  • Rich, full-bodied, heavy cup
  • Extraction controlled by time and grind
  • More body, more sediment, more depth

Equipment

The French Press is one of the most accessible brew setups in coffee. The equipment list is short but each item matters.

Brewer
French Press
350ml, 600ml, or 1 litre sizes. Borosilicate glass or stainless steel both work. Avoid plastic carafes.
Grinder
Burr Grinder
Coarse, uniform grind is essential. Blade grinders produce fine dust that passes through the mesh and ruins the cup.
Kettle
Any Kettle
A standard kettle works fine for French Press. Gooseneck is not required. Temperature control is helpful but not critical.
Scale
Kitchen Scale
Weighing your coffee and water removes one major variable from every brew. 1g precision is sufficient.
Timer
Any Timer
Steep time is your primary extraction control. Four minutes is standard. Do not guess.
Spoon or Paddle
Long Spoon
For stirring after the pour. Wooden or silicone preferred to avoid scratching glass carafes.

Starting Ratios

French Press uses a 1:15 to 1:17 ratio, similar to most manual brew methods. The recipe below is for a standard 600ml French Press producing two servings. Scale up or down proportionally for different sizes.

35g
Coffee
Coarse grind
525ml
Water
93 to 96°C
1:15
Ratio
Full bodied
4 min
Steep Time
Standard window

French Press benefits from slightly higher water temperature than most pour overs because the coarse grind requires more energy to extract properly. Use water between 93 and 96°C. If you are using darker roasts, 90 to 92°C is sufficient. Boil your water and let it sit off heat for 20 to 30 seconds if you do not have a thermometer.

Grind size is the single most important variable in French Press. If your grind is too fine, grounds pass through the mesh filter and cloud the cup, and the extended steep time will over-extract the fines into bitterness. Aim for a grind that looks like coarse sea salt or raw sugar: large, visible particles with minimal dust at the bottom of the grinder.

Step by Step

French Press is straightforward but every step has a reason. Follow this sequence until the results are consistently good, then experiment with steep time and dose.

1
Preheat the Press
Pour hot water into the empty French Press carafe, swirl it around, and discard. This step preheats the glass or steel vessel so it does not pull heat from your brew during the steep. A cold carafe can drop your brew temperature by 5 to 8°C within the first minute, significantly affecting extraction. This takes 20 seconds and is worth doing every time.
2
Grind and Add Coffee
Grind 35g of coffee to a coarse, uniform consistency. The grind should look like coarse sea salt or raw sugar: large, clearly visible particles. Add the ground coffee to the preheated carafe and place on your scale. Tare to zero before pouring water.
Check for fines. After grinding, look at the pile of grounds. If you see a visible layer of fine powder or dust at the bottom, your grinder is producing too many fines. Go coarser, or consider upgrading your grinder. Fines are the primary cause of bitter, muddy French Press.
3
Start the Timer and Bloom
Start your timer. Pour 70ml of hot water (double the coffee weight) over the grounds to initiate the bloom. Pour in a slow, even spiral to saturate all the grounds. Watch for the coffee to swell and bubble slightly as CO₂ releases. Wait 30 seconds before adding the remaining water. The bloom is important even in immersion brewing: it allows CO₂ to escape before the full steep begins, producing a more even, predictable extraction.
4
Add Remaining Water
After 30 seconds, pour the remaining water up to 525ml total. Pour slowly and steadily in a circular motion to ensure even saturation. Do not agitate aggressively. Place the lid on top with the plunger pulled all the way up, creating a loose seal to retain heat. Do not press yet.
Do not press immediately. A common mistake is pressing the plunger right after adding water. The plunger at this stage is just a lid. Pressing now crushes your steep time and under-extracts the coffee.
5
Steep for Four Minutes
Let the coffee steep undisturbed for four minutes from the start of your timer. Resist the urge to stir, lift the lid, or check it. At the 3:30 mark, remove the lid and use a spoon to skim off the floating crust of grounds that has formed on top. This crust slows the final plunge and contributes bitterness. Removing it produces a noticeably cleaner cup. Replace the lid.
The crust skim. This one step is the single biggest improvement most French Press drinkers can make. The floating grounds have been extracting at the surface and are usually the most over-extracted part of the brew. Remove them before pressing.
6
Press Slowly
At four minutes, press the plunger down slowly and with steady, even pressure. The full press should take 20 to 30 seconds. If the plunger meets no resistance and drops freely, your grind is too coarse. If it requires significant force, your grind is too fine or you have too much coffee. A gentle, controlled resistance throughout the press is the target. Stop pressing when the plunger reaches the bottom of the grounds bed, not the glass.
7
Pour Immediately
This is the most overlooked instruction in French Press brewing: pour all the coffee out immediately after pressing. Do not leave the brew sitting on top of the pressed grounds. Even with the plunger down, the grounds continue to extract and the coffee continues to heat in contact with the hot glass. Within two minutes of pressing, a French Press left unserved will begin to over-extract and turn bitter. Pour into a separate carafe or cups immediately.
Pour everything out. If you are making more than one cup, decant the entire brew into a separate warm vessel as soon as you finish pressing. The French Press is a brewer, not a server.

Variables and Troubleshooting

French Press problems almost always come from one of three sources: grind size, steep time, or leaving coffee on the grounds after pressing. Here is how to identify and fix each issue.

Problem
Bitter, Harsh Cup
Over-extraction. Most commonly caused by grind too fine, steep time too long, or coffee left sitting on pressed grounds after brewing.
Grind coarser, reduce steep time to 3:30, and pour immediately after pressing. Never leave brewed coffee on the grounds.
Problem
Weak, Sour Cup
Under-extraction. Grind too coarse, water too cool, or steep time too short. The coffee has not given up enough of its soluble compounds.
Grind slightly finer, use hotter water (94 to 96°C), or increase steep time to 4:30.
Problem
Muddy, Gritty Cup
Grind producing too many fine particles that pass through the metal mesh. Common with blade grinders or worn burrs.
Grind coarser. If fines persist, your grinder burrs may need replacing. Let the brew settle for 30 seconds before pouring to allow sediment to sink.
Problem
Hard to Press Down
Grind too fine, too much coffee for the carafe size, or grounds packed unevenly around the filter.
Grind coarser. Ensure you are not exceeding the maximum fill line of your French Press. Never force the plunger.
Problem
Coffee Gets Cold Fast
Carafe was not preheated, or glass is thin and loses heat quickly in an air-conditioned environment.
Always preheat the carafe. Consider a double-walled stainless steel French Press which retains heat significantly better than single-wall glass.
Problem
Tastes Fine but Gets Bitter
Coffee was left in the French Press after pressing. Grounds continue to extract even when compressed under the plunger.
Decant the entire brew into a separate carafe or cups immediately after pressing. The French Press is a brewer, not a server.

The Press Most People
Are Getting Wrong

The French Press has a reputation problem. Most people think it makes heavy, bitter, cloudy coffee and they are not wrong about their own experience. But that experience is almost always a technique problem, not a device problem. The French Press is capable of producing an outstanding cup. It just requires you to respect two things that most guides gloss over: grind coarseness and the pour-out rule.

The grind needs to be genuinely coarse. Not medium. Not medium-coarse. Coarse. If you hold it between your fingers, individual particles should feel almost gritty, like raw sugar. Most people grind too fine for a French Press because it looks right for coffee. It is not. The four-minute steep time at coarse grind produces a full, balanced extraction. The same four minutes at medium grind produces bitter, cloudy mud.

And the moment you finish pressing: pour everything out. This is the instruction nobody follows. I have watched experienced home brewers let a French Press sit on the counter for ten minutes after pressing and then wonder why their second cup tastes harsh. The grounds never stop extracting. Decant immediately into a separate warm carafe. Serve from there. Your second cup will taste exactly like your first.

The French Press Rule

"Grind coarser than you think you need to. Press at four minutes. Pour everything out immediately. Follow those three things and the French Press will not disappoint you."

French Press at a Glance

Coffee Dose
30 – 40g
Start at 35g
Water Volume
450 – 600ml
Scale to press size
Temperature
93 – 96°C
Dark roast: lower
Grind Size
Coarse
Like raw sugar or coarse sea salt
Steep Time
4 min
3:30 to 4:30 range
Ratio
1:15
Adjust to strength preference
Brew Checklist
Preheat the carafe before brewing
Grind coarse: like raw sugar or sea salt
Bloom 30 seconds before full pour
Place lid on top without pressing during steep
Skim the crust at 3:30 before pressing
Press slowly over 20 to 30 seconds
Pour all coffee out immediately after pressing
Never leave brewed coffee on the grounds