Our culture is deeply rooted in milk. We make coffee with milk directly. It's a bit different from the norm, but for me, that rich milky thing is a big ticket item.
I make a coffee flavored pudding by heating milk to 180F, stirring in ground coffee, waiting maybe 20-30 seconds, filtering out the grounds, and finally making pudding from that milk.
I have no idea what that milk would taste like, but the pudding is fantastic.
If your typically coffee disolves in hot milk, then you might be used to instant coffee. What you've shown here is a bag of coffee beans and a bag of ground coffee beans. This requires a different method than with instant coffee.
Not instant coffee. Grind beans and then steep them. The picture is of ground coffee. It looks like charcoal. It's not instant, and despite running it through a press, it does not mix.
I read through the comments and replies here... have you considered that it's just aged out or a bad batch somehow?If it does not extract, show some reaction to boiling water, or darken the water, there is a problem. If this is pre ground it could be >6m old. Not sure there's another explanation here.
In one comment you mention that it "actually tastes good"... How do you know this if it's not properly "mixing" with boiling water? Diluted coffee tastes not great, so it's a confusing thing to say
I know someone who bought a bad batch of coffee. It was dirt cheap and tasted like water. You just had to compensate by using an obscene amount of grinds to produce a little bit of something that is almost drinkable.
I've also bought some old coffee that was just barely within its shelf life. It tasted awful, but I guess you wouldn't notice if you always use lots of creme and sugar. I drink my coffee black, so the only way to make it barely tolerable was to use 2-3x the normal dose and use an aeropress to make a super fast extraction. The longer the extraction takes, the more bad stuff will end up in the cup.
I would prepare them with low expectation since they were roasted in Belize. Probably a very dark roast and not roasted recently.
Brew in a French Press at a ratio of 10g water to 1g of coffee. Steep for 5 minutes. Pour and then add a lot of milk and sugar or better condensed milk.
If the extraction is not working, you have 4 options.
Grind the beans smaller
Use a higher temperature liquid for the extraction
Extract for a longer
Extract under higher pressure
Basically, extractions happen based on surface area, wet time, solvent time and pressure.
You don't have an espresso machine, so pressure is out. There is only so hot you can make milk before the sugars start burning. That leaves grind size and extraction time. Test each one independently before combining.
I'm actually driving a Brazil right now that had almost no flavor until I reduced the grind size by 25%. Once I did, it all the sudden had flavor. Good luck!
Should I start with the basics like grinding and extraction?
I assume, those bags contain whole beans. If so, you need a grinder. You also need something like a V60 or an aeropress to handle the extraction and filtration. Oh, and using a scale is highly recommended, but not strictly necessary.
If these things didn’t sound familiar, you’re in for a wild ride. This rabbit hole goes deep.
I grind coffee, I know how to extract, I have a French press. This is not instant coffee, but it does not mix in the press, cowboy style or boiling it in water.
Fun fact, depending on the water and the cup, it is possible to super heat water in a microwave so that it has reached boiling point but it's not actually boiling. Tossing anything into a cup like this will cause the water to violently boil often causing burns.
No. I grind my beans with a burr grinder. I used to use a French press but I did not like how it tasted. So, I experimented with heating milk, putting in the grinds, and then sieving it. It has always worked out well. This is the only coffee that has not done what I anticipated.
I've never heard of a bar grinder. Do you mean a burr grinder? The two most common styles are conical and flat.
Very fresh coffee will have a bloom due to CO2 that's still trapped. When I do a pour over with coffee that's <2 weeks after roasting, it has a very large bloom. While coffee that's been sitting for months tends to have no bloom.
If you're using a press pot, one thing you can do is to only press down to where the filter is just below the surface of the coffee then do a slow pour into your cup or carafe. This will keep most of the fines and sludge in the press pot.
My basic press pot recipe is to use water that's 206° F to 208° F (96.6° C to 97.7° C). 1:16 ratio coffee to water by weight. (You can lower that ratio if you like it stronger) Pour the hot water into the grounds and let it steep for 4 minutes. Stir the grounds to break the crust, spoon off the foam, and let everything settle for another 5 minutes. Finally, put the filter just below the surface of the coffee, do not press any further, then do a slow pour into a carafe. The pour usually takes 1 to 2 minutes. This is a slow method but makes a very good cup.
Edit: I usually grind slightly coarser than I would use for pour over.
Reading your replies you mean it doesn’t brew in any method not mix right? Could you make a video for our interest. It sounds like I among others was mistaken, you aren’t confused, this is some indestructible roast
Sounds like it could be a super ultra dark roast. Do the beans look like coal? Normal coffee should have a brown color, but if the beans are more like biochar, you can expect the coffee to taste like elemental carbon and ash. if it’s mostly carbon, all the sweet and juicy flavors have been destroyed during roasting.
You keep saying that it doesn't mix, like you're expecting it to dissolve as instant coffee does.
Ground coffee can either be immersed in a French press like it sounds you've been trying, or percolated by using a pour over or drip brewer. Any method will leave all the ground coffee behind as the water does the extraction. It will not mix or dissolve.