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Femobook A68 & A4Z - 2025 U.S. Brewers Cup 2nd place - Christian Bak

 

 

The Philosophy Behind the Brew - Christian Bak

For 2025 U.S. Brewers Cup runner-up Christian Bak, his approach centers on what he calls "distilling variables." Using tools like the flat-bottomed April dripper and low-RPM grinders, inconsistency gets removed from the equation, turning brewing into a manageable, repeatable system.

"It's always about the third cup you make, not the first one. It's how you adjust after every brew."

The first brew is simply a diagnostic. The real work starts after tasting, thinking, and adjusting.

The Foundation

For the April dripper and Femobook A68 setup, Christian's go-to baseline is a 1:16 ratio:

Variable Measurement
Coffee 15 grams
Water 240 ml
Ratio 1:16

The April dripper's flat bottom creates a shallow, even coffee bed, allowing water to pass through the grounds more uniformly than a cone dripper. At 1:16, contact time hits an extraction equilibrium — pulling out sweetness and acidity without tipping into bitterness. The shallow bed also produces high flavor separation, delivering the "juicy and textured" profile Christian's method is known for.

The Two-Pour Method

The total 240ml is split into two equal 120g pours.

  • Phase 1 (0:00): The first 120g sets the acidity and flavor "pop."
  • Phase 2 (0:35): At 35 seconds, the remaining 120g finishes the extraction and builds sweetness and body.

Both pours maintain a flow rate of 10–12 grams per second. Keeping it to two pours — rather than four or five — is intentional. Fewer solvent passes preserve the depth and roundness of the cup. Multi-pour methods add clarity but strip the texture that makes flat-bed brewing distinctive.

The 60/60 Agitation Rule

Within each 120g pour, Christian's method calls for a 60/60 split:

  • First 60g — circular pours in a spiral motion around the bed
  • Next 60g — a steady center pour
Technique Per-Circle Amount Effect
6 Circle Pours ~10g per circle Increases extraction and intensity
Center Pour Steady stream Builds body and structure

The 10g per circle standard is key. Six circles at 10g each reaches 60g precisely, making agitation a countable action rather than a vague feeling. To add intensity, add a circle. To reduce it, take one away.

Grinder Choice and Ratio Adjustments

The A68 — Depth and Texture

The Femobook A68 pairs naturally with the April dripper's flat bed, producing juicy, textured, sweet cups. Christian's recommendation here is straightforward — stick with the 1:16 ratio and two-pour structure.

The A4Z — Clarity and Separation

The A4Z suits cone drippers and multi-pour structures — it was Christian's grinder of choice at the Brewers Cup for a processed, fruit-forward coffee requiring high clarity. With a five-pour setup, the ratio shifts to 1:17 (12g to 200ml) to account for the increased solvent passing through the bed and avoid over-extraction.

The ratio is not a fixed rule — it's a response to equipment and method.

What the Cup Should Feel Like

Three markers signal Christian's method is working:

  • Juiciness — bright, fruit-forward acidity that feels lively, not sharp.
  • Texture — a round mouthfeel without heaviness.
  • Sweetness — a clean finish; any savory or "tomato-like" quality signals extraction has drifted.

Standardizing the ratio, quantifying agitation, and matching equipment to the desired outcome gives any brewer the ability to consistently bring out the best in any coffee — and that's where real brewing mastery begins.

 

 

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