About this tool
Pour over coffee depends on three things: ratio, grind, and pour technique. This tool gives you the dose-to-water math plus a staged pour plan so you can hit a clean 3 to 4 minute brew. Use medium-fine grind, a gooseneck kettle, and water between 195 and 205F. Bloom with 2x your dose, wait 30 to 45 seconds, then pour in stages.
How it works
Enter your dose in grams. Pick a ratio between 1:15 (stronger, fuller) and 1:18 (cleaner, brighter). The calculator returns total water, the bloom amount, and three target weights for staged pours. Aim for around 3 minutes total brew time on a V60.
The baker's percentage system
Professional kitchens use baker's math: every ingredient is expressed as a percentage of the flour weight. Flour is always 100%. This makes recipes scale linearly and lets you swap quantities without re-doing the math.
| Ingredient | Baker's % (lean bread) | Baker's % (enriched dough) |
|---|---|---|
| Flour | 100 | 100 |
| Water | 65-75 | 55-65 |
| Salt | 1.8-2.2 | 1.5-2.0 |
| Yeast (instant) | 0.5-1.0 | 1.0-2.0 |
| Sugar | 0 | 5-15 |
| Fat | 0-3 | 8-15 |
| Eggs | 0 | 10-25 |
Yeast conversions
| Type | vs instant yeast | Use when | Storage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Instant dry yeast | 1x | Default for breadmakers, mix directly into flour | 1-2 years freezer |
| Active dry yeast | 1.25x (use 25% more) | Older recipes, needs proofing in warm water first | 1-2 years freezer |
| Fresh / cake yeast | 3x (use 3x amount) | Professional bakers, very fresh result | 2 weeks fridge |
| Sourdough starter (100% hydration) | 20% of flour weight | Wild fermentation, longer bulk ferment | Weeks fridge, indefinite if fed |
Oven temperature conversions
| Description | °F | °C | Gas mark |
|---|---|---|---|
| Very cool | 275 | 135 | 1 |
| Cool | 300 | 150 | 2 |
| Warm | 325 | 165 | 3 |
| Moderate | 350 | 175 | 4 |
| Moderately hot | 375 | 190 | 5 |
| Hot | 400 | 200 | 6 |
| Very hot | 425 | 220 | 7 |
| Extremely hot | 450 | 230 | 8 |
| Maximum (pizza) | 475-500 | 245-260 | 9-10 |
Salt percentages for curing
Dry curing requires precise salt-by-weight calculations. Equilibrium curing uses 2.5-3.0% salt by total meat weight; nothing washes off. Pink curing salt (sodium nitrite) at 0.25% prevents botulism in long-cured products.
- Bacon: 2.5% salt, 0.25% pink curing salt #1, 1-2% sugar, cure 7 days per inch of thickness
- Pancetta: 2.5% salt, 0.25% pink curing salt #1, herbs and pepper, cure 14 days
- Coppa: 3.0% salt, 0.25% pink curing salt #2, cure 14-21 days then dry 60-90 days
Pink curing salt #1 (sodium nitrite only) is for cooked products (bacon, hot dogs). Pink curing salt #2 (nitrite + nitrate) is for long-dried products that don't cook (salami, prosciutto).
Hydration and dough strength
Hydration (water / flour by weight) controls the crumb structure:
- 50-55%: bagels, pretzels - dense, chewy
- 60-65%: standard sandwich bread - tight even crumb
- 65-70%: ciabatta, focaccia - irregular open crumb
- 70-80%: artisan sourdough - wild, lacy crumb
- 80%+: high-hydration sourdough (Tartine style) - requires high-protein bread flour and folds rather than kneading
The formula explained
This calculator uses the following formula:
total water = dose x ratio | bloom = dose x 2 | pours split remaining water in equal stages
The reason this formula works is rooted in the underlying physics, finance, or biology of the problem. Behind every calculator is a published, peer-reviewed equation or a widely accepted convention. We do not invent formulas; we apply standard ones from textbooks, government tables, professional bodies, and academic literature.
If you are curious about the math, the simplest way to verify is to plug in two known numbers and compare against a known result. The calculator should match published examples to within rounding precision.
Frequently asked questions
What ratio should I start with?
1:16 is the sweet spot. Stronger? Try 1:15. Lighter? 1:17. Anything outside 1:14 to 1:18 will taste off.
Why bloom?
Fresh coffee releases CO2 when wet. Blooming with 2x dose for 30-45 seconds lets gas escape so water can extract evenly.
Best water temperature?
195-205F (90-96C). Lighter roasts brew hotter, darker roasts cooler. Boiling water is too hot and burns coffee.
How many pours?
Bloom plus 2-3 main pours works for most. Slow continuous pours give more body, pulse pours give more clarity.
How do I scale a recipe up or down?
Convert all ingredients to weight (grams), express as a percentage of flour (baker's math), then scale to your target flour weight. Eggs are tricky - one large egg is ~50g of liquid. Salt and yeast scale linearly. Fermentation time stays roughly constant; baking time scales with thickness.
Why does my bread come out dense?
Most common: under-fermentation. The dough should roughly double in bulk fermentation and pass the 'poke test' - poke a finger into the dough, the dent should slowly spring back about halfway. If it springs back fully, ferment longer; if it doesn't spring back at all, you're over-proofed.
Does altitude affect baking?
Yes. Above 3,000 ft (900m): reduce yeast 25%, reduce sugar slightly, increase liquid 1-2 tbsp per cup of flour, increase oven temp 15-25°F. Above 5,000 ft (1500m) standard recipes often need major rework.
How accurate are volume measurements?
Cups vary 10-20% by how packed the flour is. For baking, weight is 2-5x more reliable. A typical 'cup' of flour is 120-150g depending on aeration. Use a digital scale for any recipe where consistency matters.
Can I substitute instant for active dry yeast?
Yes. Use 75% as much instant for the same rise (instant is more potent and doesn't need proofing). Instant goes straight into the flour; active dry needs 5-10 minutes in warm water (110°F / 43°C) with a pinch of sugar to wake up.
How accurate is the Pour Over Coffee Calculator?
It applies the standard formula. Accuracy is limited only by your input precision. For decisions with material consequences (taxes, medical, legal, structural), use the result as a starting point and verify with a qualified professional in the relevant field.
Is the Pour Over Coffee Calculator free to use?
Yes. 100% free, no signup, no payment, no API key. The site is funded by display ads around the tool but not inside the calculation flow.
Are my inputs saved anywhere?
No. All inputs stay in your browser tab. Closing the tab discards them. The site uses Google Analytics for traffic measurement (anonymized) but the analytics never see what you type into the form.
Can I use the Pour Over Coffee Calculator on my phone?
Yes. The tool is responsive and tested on iOS Safari, Android Chrome, and major desktop browsers. Touch targets meet Apple's 44pt and Google's 48dp minimum.
Does the Pour Over Coffee Calculator work offline?
Yes. Once the page has loaded, it works without internet. The calculation runs in JavaScript on your device.
How do I report a bug or suggest improvement to the Pour Over Coffee Calculator?
Email hi@3tej.com with the URL of this page and a description of what you saw vs expected. We typically respond within 72 hours.
Can I share results from the Pour Over Coffee Calculator?
Take a screenshot or copy the output. The page doesn't generate shareable URLs for specific calculations - inputs stay in your browser only.
Why are the results different from another pour over coffee tool?
Most likely: different formula assumptions, different default values, different rounding rules, or different applicable rates. Check the methodology if both tools document it. Both can be valid for different scenarios.
