I am not against any method people prefer.
I've had every method from hobo coffee, instant, bad quality, good..... percolator to pour over, campfire pans to glass pots.
However, I just bought a spare French press as a backup in case my daily user breaks. That's my favorite. In case you're not familiar, they are essentially a glass beaker with a handle that encases it so you can handle and pour it. I fabricated a special double walled mylar insulator to keep it hot longer. The drawbacks to a French press are that they can easily break and that they lose heat quickly. I made the insulator with my personal camo and an elastic bungee cord for extra heat seal. It snaps together with three snaps and came out perfect. I did something similar with the top because heat rises, so made it a hat.
The whole bean coffee is ground just before use and added after preheating the press with hot water.
Once the water is about boiling, it's poured in while stirring with a bamboo chop stick.
The lid is set on top. It consists of a stainless steel screen and stem that becomes the press.
Around 4 minutes, the coffee is ready. Then you push down the press which strains the grounds to the bottom.
This method seems to extract the most flavor , yet doesn't allow the grounds to become bitter.
The most important part is the use of purified water. I decided to forgo city chemically sanitized water for a Royal Berky Water Purification Unit. I have an indoor well which I like.
The Berky is the same model that the queen of England is said to use. I never met her to ask, but it's good enough for me regardless. đŸ˜‰