You might regularly vaporize green tea, yerba mate, or lemon balm. The list of herbs and plants that can be vaporized is really long. Are you wondering if you can vaporize coffee? The answer to this question is not straightforward. Check it out!
Coffee – not just an aromatic beverage!
Are you one of those people who starts every morning with a cup of strong, aromatic coffee, and then reaches for it several times throughout the day? Can’t imagine life without a caffeine boost? Or maybe the taste of coffee has started to bore you and you’re looking for an alternative that also gives you energy.
If so, definitely try yerba mate – some say it stimulates even better than coffee.
But what about coffee itself – can it be consumed in different forms? The question is whether it’s possible to vaporize coffee.
Vaporizing coffee – is it a good idea?
It turns out the idea of vaporizing coffee has been around for some time. Of course, it raises a lot of doubts – because if we place dry herbs in the vaporizer chamber, how can we use coffee?
Should it be ground or used as whole beans? Won’t coffee damage the vaporizer?
You can find information online from people who dared to try this. Most often, they use whole coffee beans or halves of coffee beans and heat them in a vaporizer to 200 degrees Celsius. The results?
Allegedly, vaporizing coffee is possible and can even be quite pleasant. Heating the herb chamber allows the full aroma of the coffee to be released.
As we know, coffee is a strong stimulant, but it’s uncertain whether this form will provide any stimulation.
DynaVap – ideal for vaporizing coffee?
Among people who want to risk and try vaporizing coffee, the most popular choice is DynaVap vaporizers. The vaporizer chamber seems to be perfectly shaped for placing coffee beans in it.
DynaVap allows for the extraction of the sweet-bitter aroma of coffee, but – as you might guess – over time the taste becomes much more intense.
Similar to long-roasted coffee – over time and with increasing temperature, the depth of the bean’s aroma is extracted, which is particularly appreciated by coffee connoisseurs. What about other vaporizers?
There’s no information on this, although surely many people try to vaporize coffee and later don’t share their results.
Maybe coffee cherry herb instead?
If you’re worried about your vaporizer but are interested in what vaporizing coffee might be like, there is an alternative. Coffee cherry herb is available on the market – it is used, among other things, to prepare a specific tea… with a coffee flavour.
This solution seems to be much safer for the vaporizer and might achieve interesting results.
And if not – well, your tea collection will be enriched with something completely new that will surprise your guests more than once.
Vaporizing coffee – summary
The possibility of vaporizing coffee raises a lot of interest among people who love both this form of inhalation and aromatic black coffee. Does it make sense? It’s hard to say.