• A column with no settings can be used as a spacer

  • Link to your collections, sales and even external links

  • Add up to five columns

  • Why Coffee Tastes Sour

    You’ve bought the fancy V60, watched the YouTube tutorials, and finally ordered a bag of premium single-origin beans fromΒ Bean Shipper. You expect a burst of floral notes, but instead, your first sip is… aggressively sour.

    It’s a frustrating moment that makes many Malaysians think, "Maybe I’m just not a specialty coffee person." Before you give up and go back to instant mix, here’s a secret: It’s probably not the beans. High-quality specialty coffee is naturally acidic, but it should never taste like a lemon. Here are the three most common reasons your homebrew is missing the mark and how to fix them using what you have in your Malaysian kitchen.

    1. The "Under-Extraction" Trap

    In coffee science, "sour" usually means "under-extracted." This happens when the water hasn't had enough time or surface area to pull the sweetness out of the bean.

    • The Fix: Grind finer. If your coffee tastes like a sour lime, your grind size is likely too coarse (resembling sea salt). Try moving your grinder a few clicks finer until it resembles table salt. This slows down the water flow, giving it more time to extract those hidden sugars.

    2. The Water Temperature Myth

    Many Malaysian households use "hot water" from a standard water dispenser. Often, these dispensers top out at 80Β°C to 85Β°C. For a light-roast Ethiopian or Colombian bean, that’s simply not hot enough to extract the flavour.

    • The Fix: Use boiling water. If you are brewing light to medium roasts, don't be afraid of the "off the boil" temperature (92Β°C - 96Β°C). If you don't have a temperature-controlled kettle, let your Maggi-boiling water sit for just 30 seconds before pouring.

    3. The "Tap Water" Taint

    The mineral content in our local tap water (even if filtered through a household carbon filter) varies wildly between Selangor, Penang, and Johor. If your water is too "soft" or has too many chemicals, it can emphasise harsh acidity and mask the bean's true profile.

    • The Fix: Try a "Water Test." Brew one cup with your usual tap water and one cup with bottled mineral water (like Sea Master or Desa). You’ll be shocked at how much sweeter the mineral water version tastes.


    Pro Tip: If you’re tired of "dialing in" and wasting half a bag of expensive beans, try our Bean Shipper Taster Packs. We provide smaller 90g portions of different roasts so you can find your perfect grind size without the guilt of wasting a premium 300g bag.



    Also in Coffee Blog

    The Ultimate Guide to the Best Coffee Beans in Malaysia (2026 Edition)

    Looking for the best coffee beans in Malaysia? We review the top roasted coffees for 2026, from dark roast espresso to fruity single origins. Freshly roasted, Halal-friendly, and delivered to your door. Read the guide now.

    Read More
    Your Guide to Specialty Coffee

    Finding the perfect coffee bean in Malaysia used to mean settling for generic supermarket brands or overly dark traditional Kopi O., but the landscape has changed. From the highlands of Chiang Mai to the hidden roasteries in Subang Jaya, the Malaysian specialty coffee scene is exploding.

    In this guide, Bean Shipper breaks down everything you need to know: the difference between local Liberica and imported Arabica, how to choose the right roast for your V60 or Espresso machine, and why "Fresh Roasted" dates matter more than "Best Before" dates.

    Read More
    What is Specialty Coffee

    What's the difference between specialty and commercial coffee?

    Read More