What’s 50 grams, starts off as a no-bypass style brewer (eventually it allows some bypass, with age), and folds smaller and flatter than a pair of socks for super easy travel and backpacking options?

Why it’s the Expedition Brewer, from Native Designs (owned by Doubleshot Coffee Company). And this is our mini review of this travel / ultralight pour over brewer.

The Expedition Brewer was born out of tinkering by Doubleshot Coffee’s Brian Franklin in his own travel expeditions. Originally made out of leather and a cut out Nalgene bottle for the cone shape, it evolved into a wonderfully rustic canvas material with copper rivets, a flexible (and flatten-able) copper cone insert, and a wood stand.

The way it folds flat allows you to store as many Hario V60 #2 paper filters as you reasonably want inside of it, and you can even bring along a compact folding-cover scale (the kinds drug dealers use, but are also well suited for coffee use). The entire thing (without paper filters) weighs just 50 grams.

The $49 Expedition Brewer comes in five colours: Pine, Royal Blue, Sand, Black and Ruby (a bright magenta colour). It includes the outer holder / form that is buckled to contain the other parts; an inner, lay-flat copper cone (also riveted), and the wood base to sit on top of your mug or coffee server.

Folded flat, it measures 180mm by 115mm (7” x 4.5”), and is only 12mm (.5”) thick.

This is our Snapshot Review of the travel brewer.

  • Design
  • Usability
  • Features
  • Performance
  • Value vs. Cost
CoffeeGeek
Score
The
Bottom
Line
A neat little travel brewer that does a good job at a no-bypass style brew of pour over coffee, all in a package that disappears in your ultralight gear backpack. A bit pricey, but also unique.
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Baratza Grinders, 25 Years

How We Got the Expedition Brewer

Doubleshot Coffee Company contacted us to ask if we’d like to review this brewing device. We agreed and they sent us three different colour versions. We have since given away two of them in an online social media contest.

How We Tested the Expedition Brewer

There’s no “test rules book” for this kind of brewer, and being a Snapshot Review (formerly, this was a blog-posted “mini review”, we did the review informally overall.

That said, we did put the brewer up against some competitor devices, including the GSI Ultralight Outdoors Java Drip ($11), and side by side tasting with a traditional V60 system and based our review results on those tests and head to head comparisons.

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Expedition Brewer
A neat little travel brewer that does a good job at a no-bypass style brew of pour over coffee, all in a package that disappears in your ultralight gear backpack. A bit pricey, but also unique.

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ReviewComments

3 Responses

  1. Ummm – you double pasted a paragraph …

    Also, it turns out that having flaps and buttons to close the flaps is a good thing with this brewer. It keeps the copper sleeve in place during travel, as well as keeping paper filters secure. Franklin also travels with a little pocket gram scale with a closing lid, that also slots into this brewer nicely with the flaps closed and secured, giving him that additional tool in the good pour over coffee arsenal.

    The flaps seem to get in the way a bit when the brewer is in use, as the canvas material is fairly stiff. With age and use, the canvas will soften, and this should become less of an issue.

    It is very easy to get the Expedition Brewer dirty; I got some coffee grounds and coffee brew on the canvas in my first four or five brews, by accident. It can lead to the “rustic charm” of the device, but if you’re someone who wants their gear to look pristine constantly, be aware.

    1. thanks for the correction Andrew. My bad, fixed now. (this is what happens when I publish on the weekend and don’t wait for my senior blog contributor to proof the work ;))

  2. I love the design/concept of this ultra lightweight brewer. Of course, if you’re going to add a grinder (my Aergrind weighs in at a hefty 455g), beans and a method of heating water, the weight is not so insignificant.

    If you want a super lightweight option, a high-end capsule, like Cometeer, would work well for a day hike. But anybody reading this blog recognizes that the ritual of making coffee is as important as the drink itself. That is what makes an Aeropress or this Expedition Brewer superior to a convenient, but soulless, capsule.

    I consider the Next Level Pulsar to be a great travel brewer, too, although I haven’t tried it on a hike.

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