# Coffee Blooming (Pre-Infusion) Guide: Purpose and Proper Technique

> Understand why the bloom matters, how to do it correctly, and how bean freshness affects the process. Everything you need to know about pre-infusion for better pour-over coffee.

**Canonical URL**: https://coffee-guide.jp/en/brewing/coffee-bloom-blooming-guide  
**Category**: Brewing Methods  
**Published**: 2026-05-26  
**Updated**: 2026-05-26  
**Author**: Coffee Guide Editorial  
**Tags**: bloom, pre-infusion, freshness, pour-over  

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Most pour-over recipes include a "bloom" step at the beginning — a small pour of water followed by a brief wait before the main brew. But what's actually happening during those 30–45 seconds, and what goes wrong if you skip it?

This guide covers the science of coffee blooming, proper technique, how to adjust for bean freshness, and why the bloom is more than just a ritual.

## What Is the Bloom?

The **bloom** (also called "pre-infusion" or "blooming") is the first step in pour-over brewing. You pour a small amount of hot water — roughly 2–3 times the weight of your coffee grounds — over the bed and pause for 30–45 seconds before continuing.

During this pause, the coffee puffs up noticeably. That dome-like expansion is carbon dioxide escaping from the grounds — and managing that release is why the bloom exists.

## Why the Bloom Is Necessary

### CO2 Release

Coffee beans generate large amounts of CO2 during roasting. This gas becomes trapped inside the bean's cellular structure and slowly releases after roasting. When you grind the beans and pour hot water over them, that CO2 escapes rapidly.

If you pour your entire brew water over the grounds without blooming, the escaping CO2 creates a barrier between the water and the coffee — like trying to pour water into a container that's already full of pressurized gas. The result is uneven, patchy extraction.

### What Happens Without a Bloom

Skipping the bloom causes:

1. **Uneven water penetration**: CO2 repels water in some areas while others over-extract
2. **Inconsistent extraction**: Patches of over- and under-extracted grounds in the same brew
3. **Flatter, less complex flavor**: The bloom stage sets up the uniform extraction that unlocks the full flavor potential of the bean

The bloom is a preparation step — it levels the playing field so your main pour extracts consistently from every part of the coffee bed.


> ℹ️ **INFO**
>
> **Bloom vs. Pre-Infusion**
> "Bloom" is the common term for pour-over and drip coffee. "Pre-infusion" is more often used in the espresso world, where machines with this feature briefly wet the puck at low pressure before full extraction begins. The underlying purpose is the same.


## How to Bloom Correctly


### Brewing Recipe

**Method**: Coffee Bloom  
**Total time**: 30–45 seconds

1. **Heat water to 90–96°C (194–205°F)** — Adjust for roast level
2. **Rinse your paper filter with hot water** — Removes papery taste
3. **Add your coffee dose and level the bed** — Flat bed ensures even saturation
4. **Pour from the center outward in a slow spiral** — Use 2–3× the coffee weight in water
5. **Ensure all grounds are visibly wetted** — No dry patches
6. **Start your timer and wait 30–45 seconds** — Let CO2 escape
7. **Watch for the bed to dome and puff upward** — Sign of freshness and active CO2 release
8. **Begin your main pours once the bloom settles** — Bloom is complete


### Bloom Water Volume Reference

| Coffee Dose | 2× Water | 3× Water |
|-------------|---------|---------|
| 10g | 20ml | 30ml |
| 15g | 30ml | 45ml |
| 20g | 40ml | 60ml |
| 25g | 50ml | 75ml |

A few drops falling through into the server during the bloom is completely normal — it doesn't affect the result.

## Adjusting for Bean Freshness

### Very Fresh Beans (1–2 Weeks Post-Roast)

- **Bloom time**: 40–50 seconds (high CO2, needs more time to release)
- **Bloom appearance**: Large, active dome; may rise significantly
- **Tip**: Use the lower end of bloom water (2× dose) to avoid overflow

### Standard Freshness (2–4 Weeks Post-Roast)

- **Bloom time**: 30–40 seconds (standard)
- **Bloom appearance**: Clear rise, moderate doming
- **Tip**: No special adjustment needed

### Older Beans (1+ Month Post-Roast)

- **Bloom time**: 20–30 seconds (less CO2, less time needed)
- **Bloom appearance**: Minimal rise, mostly flat
- **Tip**: Bloom is less impactful; consider sourcing fresher beans


> 💡 **TIP**
>
> **Using the Bloom as a Freshness Indicator**
> The vigor of the bloom is the easiest way to assess bean freshness at home. Big, active blooming means the beans were recently roasted. A flat, lifeless bloom suggests they've been sitting too long. Always check the roast date when buying beans — ideally you want to be brewing within 2–4 weeks of roast.


## Advanced Bloom Techniques

### Stir After Blooming

After the bloom settles, gently stirring the saturated grounds with a spoon or chopstick helps ensure full, even contact before the main pours begin. This is especially useful when brewing larger doses (18g+) or with particularly dense light-roast beans.

### Extended Bloom for Light Roasts

Light roasts are dense and resistant to water penetration. Extending the bloom to 45–55 seconds and making sure every gram of grounds is saturated helps compensate for this. Under-bloomed light roasts often taste sour or flat.

### Espresso Pre-Infusion

High-end espresso machines feature a pre-infusion mode that briefly wets the puck at low pressure (2–4 bar) for 5–10 seconds before full extraction pressure kicks in. This is the espresso equivalent of a pour-over bloom — and it makes a noticeable difference in shot consistency on fresh beans.

## FAQ

**Q: Does bloom water count toward the total brew volume?**
A: Yes. If your recipe calls for 300ml total, your bloom (say, 40ml) is included in that figure. After the bloom, pour the remaining 260ml in your main pours.

**Q: Should I bloom for cold brew?**
A: Cold brew doesn't require a bloom. Room-temperature or cold water doesn't trigger CO2 release the same way hot water does. The long steep time compensates. A brief stir at the start helps ensure even saturation.

**Q: What if I forget to bloom?**
A: Your extraction will likely be slightly uneven, but it won't ruin the cup. The difference is most noticeable with very fresh, high-quality beans. Over time, consistent blooming adds up to consistently better coffee.

## Summary

The bloom isn't ceremonial — it's practical and grounded in extraction science.

- Pour 2–3× your coffee weight in hot water
- Wait 30–45 seconds, adjusting for bean freshness
- Watch for visible doming to confirm CO2 release

Fresh beans bloom dramatically. Older beans bloom less. The bloom tells you something about your ingredients while simultaneously setting up a better cup. Once it becomes habit, you won't want to skip it.

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