AeroPress vs Chemex vs French Press: which is the best method for specialty coffee?

In Travel around the world in a cup: Explore the culture and traditions of specialty coffee. 0 comments
AeroPress vs Chemex vs French Press: ¿cuál es el mejor método para café de especialidad?

There's a question almost every specialty coffee lover asks at some point: does the brewing method really matter? The short answer is yes — and more than you might imagine.

The same coffee brewed in an AeroPress, a Chemex, and a French Press can taste completely different. Not because one method is bad, but because each extracts the coffee differently, highlighting certain characteristics and suppressing others. Choosing the right method is the difference between a cup that surprises you and one that simply gets the job done.

How each method works: the physics behind the flavor

Before comparing, it's helpful to understand the basic principle of each. Coffee extraction depends on three variables: temperature, contact time, and pressure. Each method combines them differently.

  • AeroPress — uses manual pressure to force water through coffee in a short time
  • Chemex — uses gravity through a thick paper filter, with no pressure
  • French Press — uses full immersion without a paper filter, only a metal mesh

This difference in the extraction mechanism is what produces such distinct results.

AeroPress — versatility, concentration, and total control

The AeroPress is a favorite method among coffee tasting competitors for a reason: it's the most versatile and allows the most variables to be controlled. You can play with extraction time, water temperature, coffee quantity, pressure direction (inverted method), and grind size — and each change produces a different result.

What it does well:

  • Extracts quickly without sacrificing complexity
  • Produces a concentrated, clean, and full-bodied coffee
  • Highlights acidity and fruity notes with precision
  • Is more forgiving of errors than other methods
  • Is portable, durable, and almost indestructible

What it doesn't do so well: It doesn't produce large volumes. Ideal for one or two cups.

Green Hills Recommendation: Natural Coffee shines in an AeroPress — the pressure highlights its red fruit and passion fruit notes with a clarity that other methods cannot achieve. It also works very well with Honey Coffee to bring out caramel and yellow fruit notes.

Chemex — cleanliness, elegance, and flavor transparency

The Chemex is the method for those who want the coffee to speak for itself. Its special paper filter — thicker than a conventional coffee maker's — retains oils and coffee sediments, producing an extraordinarily clean and transparent beverage.

What it does well:

  • Produces the cleanest and brightest cup of the three methods
  • Highlights acidity, floral aromas, and delicate notes
  • Ideal for appreciating the complexity of washed process coffees
  • Scales easily to brew several cups at once
  • The most beautiful object of the three — functions as a design piece

What it doesn't do so well: The filter retains oils that give coffee body. The result is lighter than French Press or AeroPress. Very delicate coffees may lose presence.

Green Hills Recommendation: Tradition Coffee is ideal for Chemex — its washed process already produces a clean coffee, and the Chemex amplifies that transparency, revealing its chocolate notes with exceptional clarity. It is also the right choice for Silver, whose floral and tropical notes are best expressed without oil interference.

French Press — body, texture, and unfiltered coffee

The French Press is the most democratic and the oldest method of the three. It doesn't use a paper filter — only a metal mesh that retains ground coffee but allows the bean's natural oils to pass through. The result is the most full-bodied, textured, and present coffee of the three methods.

What it does well:

  • Produces the most full-bodied and textured coffee of the three methods
  • The coffee's natural oils remain in the cup, adding richness
  • Highlights the body and sweetness of honey and natural process coffees
  • Simple, no replacement filters, economical
  • Capacity to brew several cups

What it doesn't do so well: Leaves some sediment at the bottom of the cup. The grind must be coarse — a fine grind produces a muddy, over-extracted coffee. Less variable control than AeroPress.

Green Hills Recommendation: Honey Coffee reaches its maximum body expression in French Press — the sweetness and silky texture of the honey process are amplified when natural oils are preserved in the cup. It is also a good option for Bronze Coffee, whose density and complexity benefit from immersion extraction.

Quick comparison table

AeroPress Chemex French Press
Body Medium-high Light High
Cleanliness High Very high Medium
Acidity Highlighted Bright Softened
Time 2–3 min 4–5 min 4 min
Difficulty Medium Medium Low
Ideal GH Coffee Natural, Honey Tradition, Silver Honey, Bronze

Which one to choose?

If you want versatility and control: AeroPress. If you want the cleanest and most elegant cup: Chemex. If you want body, texture, and simplicity: French Press.

And if you want to start with the right method for the right coffee, in our store you'll find all three along with the coffees that work best with each.


→ See brewing methods in the store

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