Extraction Timer
A guided brew timer with step-by-step instructions for each brewing method. Includes bloom phase, pour intervals, steep timing, and total extraction time. Visual progress bar and audio alerts keep you on track.
CalculatorHow to Use
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1
Select your brewing method
Choose your method from the list — pour-over, espresso, AeroPress, French press, or cold brew. Each method has a distinct target extraction window based on SCA protocols and the physical mechanisms transferring flavor compounds into water.
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2
Start the timer at first contact
Begin timing precisely when water first contacts dry grounds. For pour-over, this is the beginning of the bloom pour; for espresso, it is the moment you start the pump. Accurate start timing is essential because extraction rate is highest in the first 30 seconds.
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3
Adjust grind based on your time
If extraction finishes faster than target, your grind is too coarse — tighten it. If it runs long, your grind is too fine — open it up. Grind size is the primary dial for controlling extraction time across all contact methods.
About
The Extraction Timer is built on the SCA's brewing protocol framework, which defines optimal extraction windows for each brewing method based on the physical and chemical dynamics of coffee extraction. Timing is not arbitrary — it reflects how quickly water-soluble compounds transfer from the coffee particle matrix into solution. The first compounds to extract are acids and fruity aromatics; sugars and balanced flavors follow; bitter, harsh compounds extract last. Hitting the right window means stopping extraction after the desirable compounds but before the less pleasant ones dominate.
Extraction time and grind size are tightly coupled variables. Because grind size controls the surface area exposed to water and the resistance to flow, it is the primary dial for adjusting extraction time across all brewing methods. A grinder that can make incremental, repeatable adjustments is as important as any other brewing variable. The timer gives you objective feedback on where your current setup lands, removing subjectivity from the adjustment process.
Professional baristas and competition coffee preparers use extraction timers as their primary quality control tool during service. Even a two-second deviation from a dialed-in espresso recipe signals a change in bean lot, humidity, grind consistency, or machine pressure that requires correction. The timer connects the physical act of brewing to the chemistry of extraction, helping you develop the sensory vocabulary to understand why a cup tastes the way it does.