Rescue your pour-over coffee with these two mid-brew grind adjustments

Saving the cup when variables fail

Nothing stings quite like watching a high-end bag of coffee produce a lackluster brew because the grind size missed the mark. Whether the water stalls in a muddy bed or races through like a sieve, the instinct is often to dump the carafe and start over. However,

explains that you can pivot mid-stream to salvage flavor, balance, and sweetness. By reading the visual cues of the bloom and adjusting your technique, you can turn a potential disaster into a delicious cup.

Tools and materials needed

To execute these rescues, you need your standard brewing kit: a

or similar pour-over dripper, fresh coffee, and a kettle. Most importantly, you need a scale and a timer. These tools allow you to measure exactly when to cut the brew or how much additional water to add for dilution or extraction.

Rescue your pour-over coffee with these two mid-brew grind adjustments
How To Avoid A Bad Pour Over Brew

Solving the sluggish fine grind

If your bloom looks soupy or muddy, you have ground too fine. The water will take far too long to drain, pulling harsh, bitter notes from the beans. To fix this, continue your pours as usual but stop the brew precisely at your target time—even if there is still water in the cone. Simply remove the brewer and set it aside. This prevents over-extraction. Because you missed some volume, the result will be a concentrated coffee "base." Measure the liquid in your cup and top it up with hot water to reach your standard beverage weight. This dilutes the strength to your preference while maintaining a sweet, clean extraction.

Bumping extraction on coarse grounds

When the water vanishes through the grounds too quickly, your coffee will taste hollow and sour. You must increase agitation to force extraction. Move from your standard four or five pours to seven smaller, aggressive pours. Use a faster stream to churn the grounds and allow the bed to drain completely between each dose. If the flavor still feels thin, add a final 50ml pour. While this adds slight dilution, it provides the extra contact time necessary to pull the remaining sugars from the coarse grounds.

Troubleshooting and results

These techniques work best for one or two-cup brews where the margins for error are manageable. While a massive liter-sized brew presents different hydraulic challenges, these V60 hacks ensure that even an imperfect grind doesn't lead to wasted beans. You'll achieve a balanced cup that, while perhaps slightly different in texture, retains the character of the coffee you paid for.

3 min read