# Chemex Brewing Method Guide: Clean Coffee at Its Best

> A complete guide to brewing with a Chemex. Covers the thick paper filter's role in flavor, the correct filter fold, standard recipe, grind size, pour technique, and how Chemex compares to V60.

**Canonical URL**: https://coffee-guide.jp/en/brewing/chemex-brewing-method-guide  
**Category**: Brewing Methods  
**Published**: 2026-05-25  
**Updated**: 2026-05-25  
**Author**: Coffee Guide Editorial  
**Tags**: chemex, pour-over, paper-filter, brewing  

> ※ This article contains affiliate links. We may earn a commission from qualifying purchases via Amazon Associates and A8.net partner programs. Evaluations are based on publicly available information or editorial analysis.

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The Chemex was invented in 1941 by German chemist Peter Schlumbohm. Its single-vessel design — combining dripper and server in one elegant hourglass form — earned it a place in the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York. It has been in continuous production, nearly unchanged, for over 80 years.

What distinguishes Chemex coffee from other pour-over methods is the filter. At approximately three times the thickness of standard drip filters, the Chemex filter removes virtually every coffee oil and suspended particle from the brew — producing one of the cleanest, clearest cups you can make without pressure.

## What Makes Chemex Coffee Different

### The Filter Is the Method

The Chemex proprietary filter (square or circular, white or natural) is the defining feature of the brewer. Its extraordinary thickness produces:

- **Near-zero coffee oils**: Lipids are fully absorbed by the paper
- **No fines**: Micro-fine particles that create sediment are completely blocked
- **Slow flow**: Water takes longer to pass through, extending contact time

The result is a cup that's visually transparent — you can often see light through the coffee — with a flavor that's extraordinarily clean and bright.

### How It Differs from V60

| Feature | Chemex | V60 |
|---------|--------|-----|
| Filter thickness | ~3× standard | Standard thickness |
| Cup body | Very light, no oils | Light, trace oils with paper |
| Flow rate | Slower | Faster |
| Acidity clarity | Very high | High |
| Capacity | 3–10 cups | 1–3 cups |
| Server integration | Dripper = server | Separate server needed |
| Skill ceiling | Moderate | High (pour technique matters more) |

## Equipment

- Chemex brewer (your size of choice)
- Chemex proprietary filters (square or circular)
- Gooseneck kettle
- Digital scale
- Timer
- Grinder

### Choosing Your Size

| Size | Capacity | Best For |
|------|---------|---------|
| 3-cup | ~450ml | 1–2 people |
| 6-cup | ~900ml | 2–4 people, most popular |
| 8-cup | ~1200ml | 4–6 people |
| 10-cup | ~1500ml | Large groups |


> 💡 **TIP**
>
> **Use only Chemex filters**
> Standard drip coffee filters don't work in a Chemex — they're the wrong shape and too thin. The Chemex's distinctive flavor comes specifically from its proprietary thick paper. There are compatible third-party filters that approach the same performance, but the proprietary version is the most consistent.


## Folding and Setting the Filter

The square Chemex filter needs to be folded into a cone before use.

### Square Filter Fold

1. Fold the square in half (rectangle)
2. Fold in half again (double-thickness square)
3. Open into a cone shape by separating one layer from the other three
4. **Place in Chemex with the three-layer side facing the spout**

The three-layer side faces the spout because the spout is where liquid exits — having extra layers there prevents the filter from collapsing under water weight.

### Prewetting the Filter

After positioning the filter:

1. Pour hot water slowly over the filter
2. Let it drain completely into the Chemex
3. Discard the rinse water

Prewetting:
- Removes paper taste
- Seals the filter firmly against the glass
- Preheats the Chemex so your brew temperature doesn't drop

## Standard Recipe (6-cup Chemex)

| Parameter | Value |
|-----------|-------|
| Coffee | 42g |
| Water | 700ml |
| Ratio | 1:17 |
| Grind | Medium-coarse (one step coarser than V60) |
| Water temperature | 93–96°C |
| Total brew time | 4–5 minutes |

### Smaller Batch (2–3 cups)

| Parameter | Value |
|-----------|-------|
| Coffee | 25g |
| Water | 420ml |
| Grind | Same |

## Step-by-Step Brewing


### Brewing Recipe

**Method**: Chemex  
**Total time**: 4–5 minutes

1. **Fold and place the filter; prewet with hot water** — Discard rinse water from the Chemex
2. **Add coffee grounds; level the bed** — Measure by weight
3. **Zero the scale. Start timer**
4. **Bloom pour** — Add 84ml of water (2× coffee weight) in a slow spiral from center outward:0:00–0:20
5. **Wait 45 seconds for bloom to complete** — Watch grounds puff up and settle
6. **First main pour (0** — 45–1:30): Add water in slow circles reaching the edges:Don


## Grind Size

Chemex requires a **medium-coarse grind** — coarser than V60.

### Why Coarser?

The thick Chemex filter already slows the flow significantly. If you grind to V60 specs, the total brew time extends past 5–6 minutes, resulting in over-extraction (bitter, dry finish).

### Calibration

| Brew Time | Adjustment |
|-----------|-----------|
| Under 4 minutes (too fast) | Grind one step finer |
| Over 5 minutes (too slow) | Grind one step coarser |
| 4–5 minutes | Correct |

## Pour Technique

### Circular Pouring

Pour in slow concentric circles starting at the center, moving outward to the filter wall edges. Don't pour directly onto the filter paper — this disturbs the grounds and can cause channeling.

### Pour Rate

Chemex is more forgiving of pour rate than V60 because the filter's resistance controls the flow speed more than your pour does. Still, pouring slowly and evenly produces more consistent results than fast, aggressive pouring.

### Avoid Agitating the Bed

Unlike some V60 techniques (which involve swirling or stirring), Chemex brewing generally avoids agitation. The thick filter and slow flow produce even extraction without intervention.

## Bean Selection

The Chemex's extreme clarity is best appreciated with:

- **Light to medium single origins**: The terroir and process character come through fully
- **Ethiopia (Yirgacheffe, Sidamo)**: Floral, tea-like, and bright — Chemex amplifies these qualities
- **Kenya**: Berry-forward acidity is striking in a Chemex
- **Colombia (Huila, Nariño)**: Sweet, balanced, complex

**Dark roasts work fine** in a Chemex, but the oil removal means they'll taste lighter-bodied than the same beans in a French press or V60 with a metal filter. If you want a full-bodied dark roast, consider a different method.


> ℹ️ **INFO**
>
> **If it tastes too thin**
> Some drinkers find Chemex coffee too light-bodied — particularly those used to French press or espresso. Adjustments that add body:
> - Increase dose to 1:15 ratio
> - Grind slightly finer
> - Add a second filter (dramatically slows flow, increases extraction)


## Cleaning

### Daily

- Remove filter and discard grounds
- Rinse with warm water and a drop of dish soap
- Use a long, soft brush for the neck area (a common accumulation point)
- Rinse thoroughly

### Notes

- The wooden collar (on classic models) should be removed before washing — don't submerge it
- Dishwasher use is generally not recommended by Chemex
- A bottle brush specifically for the Chemex neck is worth purchasing

## Summary

Chemex produces the cleanest pour-over available without pressure:

- **Proprietary thick filter**: Removes oils and fines for exceptional clarity
- **Grind medium-coarse**: Coarser than V60 to compensate for the slow filter
- **4–5 minutes total**: The calibration target for your grind setting
- **Light to medium single origins**: The clarity lets origin character shine through
- **One vessel serves as both dripper and server**: Elegant and functional

If you value transparency and brightness in your coffee — and appreciate brewing in a vessel that's considered a design classic — the Chemex is a natural choice.

## Related Articles

- [Chemex Review & How to Use It — The Most Beautiful Coffee Maker Explained](https://coffee-guide.jp/gear/chemex-review-how-to-use)
- [Tetsu Kasuya 4:6 Method: Complete V60 Recipe Guide](https://coffee-guide.jp/recipe/advanced-v60-recipe-tetsu-kasuya)
- [Drip Coffee for Beginners: Equipment, Steps, and Tips for a Perfect Cup](https://coffee-guide.jp/brewing/beginner-drip-coffee)
- [Coffee Blooming (Pre-Infusion) Guide: Purpose and Proper Technique](https://coffee-guide.jp/brewing/coffee-bloom-blooming-guide)
- [Coffee Brewing Methods: A Complete Guide for 2026](https://coffee-guide.jp/brewing/coffee-brewing-method-complete-guide-2025)


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