I came into one of my favorite new ways to make coffee by accident. My friend Trevor got two AeroPress coffee makers for his birthday last summer and sent me home with one, an act of generosity I appreciate every morning when I turn on the kettle.
Many people might confuse the AeroPress for Austin Powers' favorite Swedish sex device1. It's a syringe-like setup where you put grounds into one cylinder and use the other as a plunger, pressing hot water through the grounds and a filter, down into your mug. When you're done, you eject the puck of grounds into the compost bin. The coffee it creates is somewhere between espresso and a really strong cuppa joe. You can drink it as is, or add hot water to make an Americano. Some folks even use the shot it pours as the base of a latte or other espresso drinks.
A bit of an outlier in coffee maker-dom, the AeroPress is a bit like a pour-over setup or a tiny French press, and every time I use it, I marvel at its cleverness. Now a travel version has improved on the original, so much so that I think it may replace it and become the gift of the year for coffee lovers in the process.
The AeroPress Go is a minimally miniaturized version of the original. (Mr. Powers will still love it.) It's an inch shorter and a whisker narrower, meaning it brews slightly less coffee—eight ounces instead of 10. The big difference here is that all of the parts now tuck neatly into a gray plastic mug with a rubbery, red silicone lid. Inside there's a tiny spoon, a foldable stirrer to swish the grounds around, and a squat makeup-compact style case that holds the filters. Sealed up, the mug and lid look like a cousin of the mushrooms from Mario Bros.
