We have a theory that middle-aged coffee hipsters obsess over the drink precisely because it doesn’t matter.
We use an AeroPress to make coffee. It’s basically a coffee syringe. The really delightful and wonderful thing about the AeroPress is the brevity of the clean-up operation. Once you’ve finished pushing the coffee through the filter to make your drink, you just take the end off and push a bit more to deposit a puck of coffee grounds into the compost. It comes out with a satisfying ‘pock’ sound, but the key part is that because you’ve already pushed everything through, all you need to do is rinse off the end of the AeroPress and it’s good to go again.
It’s a design that satisfies precisely because it’s so simple. So obviously people massively complicate matters.
They actually have an AeroPress World Championships each year and the winning recipe is generally a study in anal retentive complexity.
The King Cricket recipe is: ‘Add coffee, add hot water, push through’. The recipe of the 2018 AeroPress World Champion demands 34.9g of coffee (grind size 8), 85 degree water and a 30-second press and there are any number of finicky instructions beyond that.
It’s insane, but it’s also a weirdly relaxing thing to be aware of. Because it doesn’t matter. It doesn’t matter at all. And you don’t have to use this recipe yourself.
If you have a stressful job and maybe a child or two (or, Lord help you, even more children than that) then your brain is basically just a gelatinous blue goop by about 8pm. The last thing you want to do at that time of day is think about anything of consequence.
What could be less important than watching other people worry about a drink that you aren’t even going to make because it’s the evening? This is how we have on occasion found ourself watching AeroPress World Championship recipes on YouTube. It is the lowest stakes viewing imaginable. Almost all coffee-related videos are. (Our number one complete-loss-of-perspective-when-worrying-about-coffee YouTube moment was a guy making coffee while camping who wanted 17g of coffee. He had a 16g scoop and reluctantly concluded that he could get close if he heaped it slightly. “We’re just going to have to eyeball it,” he lamented with a sad look in his eye.)
Watching this nonsense basically amounts to learning things that you don’t need to remember. When you otherwise have to think about and remember lots of things that do matter, this is weirdly calming. It’s almost like rinsing out your synapses.
Never underestimate the psychological value of unimportant shit. It doesn’t have to be coffee. We’d guess that model railways did a similar thing for some people back when they were a thing. That’s not what matters in this context though. What’s important here is that coffee is a very modern synapse rinse and as a consequence you’d do well to get to the age of 33 without drinking any of the stuff.
Because that’s what Eoin Morgan somehow managed. Deep into his report on the second T20 International between New Zealand and England, Wisden editor Lawrence Booth casually dropped the jaw-dropping fact that Morgan only had his first taste of coffee last week.
There are two big questions here.
- How did Morgan go 33 years without having a coffee?
- What monumental development finally persuaded him to give it a go?
Not being in New Zealand at the minute and not having Morgan’s mobile number either, we asked Lawrence. He was sort of able to answer the second question, but not the first.
He said: “It was a question out of the blue from a local reporter. The implication of the answer was that he’d never tasted coffee before, but had been told NZ coffee was very good, so he gave it a try.” (Morgan said it was terrible, incidentally. In New Zealand’s defence, we’ve established that Morgan is far from an authority on this subject.)
So how did Eoin Morgan go 33 years without having a coffee? Was that the first time in his entire life that someone had told him that coffee was nice? Did someone close to him have a bad experience with coffee when he was very young? Had he never been tired before?
Maybe he’s just one of those people, you’re thinking; one of those people who doesn’t try things; one of those people who takes a firm position on a food or drink without any evidence, like a four-year-old. (We hate these people. Grow up. Just try the thing.)
But it’s not that. We know Morgan’s not a non-trier because eventually he did try it.
This week’s experiment suggests it wasn’t a deliberate policy, it was simply something he never did. Eoin Morgan hung around on Earth for 33 years without ever once thinking to take a sip of coffee.
Like so much about Morgan, this spectacularly long-term coffee avoidance is very mysterious. It’s not that he didn’t like coffee (not until last week anyway). He’s just… avoided it.
What does this say about him? It feels like a small thing that betrays something larger. It feels like a window into his psyche.
I read a confession recently by a mum who didn’t want her young kids to grow up eating chocolate so she was always warning them about how bitter it was. Then when they were old enough she gave them their first piece of chocolate – carefully chosen to be as unpalatably bitter as possible. After that they looked at other people happily munching on chocolate with complete disbelief – how does anyone eat that stuff? And why? But they didn’t try a second time just to check for themselves.
I wonder whether Mr and Mrs Morgan had a similar aversion to their young son growing up drinking coffee, and enacted a similarly cunning plan to ensure their desired outcome. Perhaps they told him the real reason coffee is brown?
Maybe, but he still gave it a try eventually, which only begs a different question.
It’s perfectly understandable. He’s Irish. We’re big tea-drinkers. There’s no need for coffee. I’m only coming around a bit towards coffee now, and I just turned 50. I don’t think my coffee virginity lasted until 33, but I bet I wasn’t far off, if I could be bothered to check. It’s an acquired taste, after all, unlike tea.
My favourite coffee is Irish Coffee
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irish_coffee
I am surprised that it is not a big thing in Ireland
Maybe Morgan is just bored with press conferences and has started making things up.
Negative press covfefe?
Incidentally I’ve just started to get into loose leaf tea. I love it… I can’t believe it took me such oolong time.
I’m with Sam on this one.
I find it almost impossible to believe that Eoin Morgan has avoided coffee all these years and then relented this week in Christchurch.
He’s been on Middlesex’s books for 15+years and was at Dulwich College for a while before that.
Malahide is not exactly a hotbed of tea-totalism even within the Republic of Ireland.
Eoin does have previous in saying whatever he fancies on topics that don’t really matter. He is on record stating categorically that he didn’t play hurling at school and that said “explanation” for his unconventional cricket shots is an urban myth. Yet he is also on record thus:
https://www.espncricinfo.com/story/_/id/22806090/switching-colours-switching-hits
I’m a big fan of his, but Eoin is a bit of a wind-up-merchant when it comes to the press.
Try everything once, except incest and folk dancing.
Thomas Beecham
Oh dear…I tried one of those things last Christmas…
http://ianlouisharris.com/2018/12/14/z-yen-seasonal-lunch-and-brawl-guildhall-14-december-2018/
…and am planning on trying it a second time this coming festive season…
I reuse the filters from the aeropress which makes the process slightly more complicated, but on balance I find this works well. How about you KC?
Overly detailed concern with unimportant matters. On this site?
We sometimes reuse, but then other times we try and reuse them only for someone to throw them away before they can be put into service again. At the minute, we can’t be bothered.
Way to tackle that is to put the filter back in the aeropress immediately after emptying it.
Top tip.
Just what a cricket site is for. This and the PNG thread have drawn me back me in after about 7 yrs
Don’t think it’s*all* been terrible in the interim.