Hario V60 Guide: Ratio, Pouring Pattern, Drawdown Mastery
The Hario V60 has become the global icon of specialty pour-over coffee. Its 60-degree cone angle, spiral ribs and single open outlet make it a precision extractor — and one that forgives little in the way of shortcuts. Unlike an automatic drip machine where the machine does all the work, the V60 puts you in charge of the extraction: it is your pour rate, your bloom technique, your drawdown timing that make the difference. This guide gives you a solid foundation and the tools to keep improving.
Why the V60: Understanding the Design
The V60 was designed by Hario, a Japanese manufacturer of scientific glassware and coffee equipment founded in 1921. The name refers to the 60-degree cone angle — a geometry that concentrates water towards the centre before it drains, extending contact time without retaining fines. The spiral ribs prevent the paper filter from sticking to the walls, maintaining open flow channels throughout the brew. The single central outlet concentrates all flow to one drainage point.
These design choices translate directly to the cup: the V60 produces coffees with remarkable clarity, well-defined acidity and expressive floral and fruit aromatics. This is why it is the preferred brewing method for expressive origins (Ethiopia, Rwanda, Kenya, Colombia). Its limitation: it amplifies grind, water and pouring defects equally. It hides nothing.
What You Need
- Hario V60 dripper — Available in plastic (V60-01, V60-02), glass, ceramic and metal. Material does not affect extraction if your technique is consistent — plastic is more thermally stable for beginners.
- V60 paper filters — White (pre-bleached, minimal paper taste) or natural (unbleached). Always rinse the filter with hot water before use to remove residual paper taste and preheat the dripper.
- Gooseneck kettle — The narrow spout gives precise control over pour rate. The Hario V60 Buono (electric or stovetop) is a benchmark, but any narrow-spout kettle works well.
- Scale with timer — Essential. Tracking pour weight in real time is what allows you to reproduce a recipe.
- Burr grinder — Same requirement as espresso: uniform particle size is critical for a consistent drawdown.
Variables and Their Effects
| Variable | Reference value | If you increase | If you decrease |
|---|---|---|---|
| Coffee-to-water ratio | 1:16 to 1:17 | Lighter, more acidic cup | More concentrated, denser cup |
| Grind size | Medium-fine (table salt) | Faster drawdown, under-extraction | Slower drawdown, over-extraction |
| Water temperature | 91–94°C | Faster extraction, deeper notes | Gentler extraction, more floral |
| Bloom time | 30–45 seconds | Better saturation of coffee bed | Residual CO₂ disrupts extraction |
| Pour rate | 4–6 g/s | More turbulence, more aggressive | Gentler contact, softer extraction |
| Number of pours | 2–5 | More control, repeated agitation | Simpler, less turbulence |
The Bloom: Why It Cannot Be Skipped
The bloom (or pre-infusion) is the first step after placing the coffee. You pour approximately twice the coffee weight in water (for 15 g coffee → 30 g water), then wait 30–45 seconds, watching the grounds swell and release CO₂.
Why it matters: fresh coffee contains CO₂ trapped in its cells — particularly abundant in the 2–4 weeks after roasting. If this gas is not released before the main extraction, it creates uneven resistance pockets in the coffee bed. Water flows around these pockets, extracts unevenly, and the resulting cup lacks coherence. A thorough bloom saturates the bed evenly and releases CO₂ so the main pours can extract cleanly.
Pouring Patterns: How to Pour
Concentric circles (most common)
After the bloom, pour water in steady concentric circles, moving from centre to edge and back, maintaining a roughly constant water level in the cone. The goal: never let the bed drop exposed (which creates uneven extraction) while avoiding pouring directly onto the paper filter edges (water bypasses the coffee). Pour continuously or in 50–60 g intervals.
Pulse pours
Bloom → pause → second pour → pause → third pour → etc. Each pause lets the level drop partially, creating different agitation at each stage. More control, more variables. Recommended once the circular technique is comfortable.
Rao Allonge (bypass method)
Brew a shorter-ratio concentrate (1:10 to 1:12), then add hot water separately to reach your final strength. Produces an ultra-fast drawdown and maximum clarity. An advanced technique worth exploring once the fundamentals are solid.
Reading the Drawdown
Drawdown is the time water takes to pass through the coffee bed and filter. It depends on grind size and pour rate. A drawdown of 2:30 to 3:30 minutes (including bloom) typically indicates a good grind. Outside this range:
- Drawdown under 2 min — Grind too coarse. Water passes too fast, under-extraction. Grind finer.
- Drawdown over 4 min — Grind too fine. Water is restricted, possible over-extraction, filter may clog. Grind coarser.
- Irregular drawdown — Uneven pouring or disturbed coffee bed. Work on pour consistency.
Common Mistakes and Fixes
- Not rinsing the filter — Paper taste in the cup. Always rinse with boiling water before adding coffee.
- Too short a bloom — Flat, incoherent cup. Minimum 30–45 seconds.
- Pouring onto the filter paper edges — Water bypasses the coffee. Stay central, at least 5 mm from the edges.
- Blade grinder — Unpredictable drawdown, fines clog the filter. Burr grinder only.
- Boiling water (100°C) — Over-extracts bitter compounds. Let water rest 30–60 s after boiling, or use a temperature-controlled kettle.
- No scale — Impossible to reproduce a recipe or diagnose a problem. A scale is essential, not optional.
The V60 is an honest brewer. It does not flatter and it does not conceal. If your coffee is good and your water is clean, it will give you the most expressive cup you have ever tasted. If something in the chain is off, it will tell you clearly, every single time. That transparency is both its strength and its greatest teaching tool.
Reference Recipes by Origin
- Ethiopia (jasmine, bergamot, floral) — 15 g / 250 g, 91°C, ratio 1:16.7. Medium grind. Long 45-second bloom. Gentle spiral pours.
- Rwanda / Burundi (blackcurrant, fruity) — 15 g / 240 g, 93°C, ratio 1:16. 30-second bloom. Two pours of 105 g after bloom.
- Colombia (caramel, hazelnut, apple) — 15 g / 250 g, 93°C. 30-second bloom. Continuous concentric circles.
- Sumatra / Indonesia (earthy, cocoa) — 15 g / 240 g, 94°C, slightly coarser grind. Vigorous 45-second bloom. Single continuous pour after bloom.