Coffee extraction with the French Press, immersion, diffusion, and time: chemistry without artifice
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Celine Van Overdijk
- 24 mars 2026
- Brew Méthodes
The French Press is often seen as “simple.” In reality, it is one of the purest methods from a physicochemical point of view, because it almost entirely isolates the phenomenon of diffusion. Here, there is no flow rate to control. No pressure. No percolation. Only time and chemistry.
The chemical foundations of immersion extraction
Roasted coffee contains hundreds of soluble compounds:
• organic acids
• sugars
• aromatic compounds
• polyphenols
• caffeine
Diffusion: the central phenomenon
Diffusion is the migration of soluble compounds from the coffee into the water.
In a French Press:• all particles are exposed to the same solvent
• the gradient is homogeneous
• extraction is even This helps limit: localized under-extraction aromatic imbalance
Grind size: specific surface area and control
The grind size for a French Press is coarse (≈ 900–1200 microns).
Why?• to reduce contact surface area
• to slow extraction kinetics
• to limit the extraction of polyphenols responsible for astringency A grind that is too fine leads to:
• bitterness
• muddy texture
• a dry sensation on the palate
Temperature and solubility
Higher temperatures increase the solubility of heavier compounds. In a French Press, 92–96°C is common, but the longer brewing time largely compensates. Time management is therefore the real lever of selectivity.
Infusion time: the critical parameter
Unlike percolation, extraction in immersion continues as long as the coffee remains in contact with the water.
Less than 3 minutes: hollow, underdeveloped cup4 minutes: equilibrium zone
5 minutes: extraction of bitter compounds In the French Press, time is the absolute key.
Metal filtration: oils and texture
The metal filter allows through oils
and fine particles.
This increases body, viscosity and tactile sensation.
But it also requires clean decanting and immediate serving after pressing.
Why the French Press is such a valuable teaching tool
It makes it possible to:
• isolate the impact of time
• understand pure diffusion
• analyze texture
• train the palate to perceive body and roundness
• sensory training
• comparative tasting
• analysis of chocolate-forward or natural profiles
The French Press is a lesson in patience. It teaches that extraction is not always a matter of control, but sometimes of mastered surrender. And it reminds us of an essential truth: coffee is not always about clarity, sometimes, it is about depth.

