The first time I really understood what V60 was supposed to taste like, I was standing at a small counter in Al Barsha 1, watching a barista at Cantata weigh out 15 grams of beans on a jewellery-grade scale. No milk on offer, no sugar sachets in sight, just a paper filter, a gooseneck kettle, and a smell coming off the grinder that was closer to blueberry jam than to what most people in the UAE call coffee. I had walked in expecting another flat white spot. I walked out with a completely different idea of what pour-over could be in Dubai.
Since that afternoon I have tried V60 in almost every serious specialty cafe from Jumeirah to City Walk to DIFC, and I keep coming back to the same conclusion. If you care about a clean, aromatic, sugar-free cup, the best v60 coffee in the country is being brewed inside the Al Attar Business Center in Al Barsha 1. This article explains why, what makes their beans unusual for the UAE market, and how to reproduce a proper V60 at home so you can taste the difference for yourself.
Why Cantata in Al Barsha 1 Sets the Bar
Dubai is not short on cafes. What it is short on is places that treat filter coffee as the main event rather than a polite alternative to a cappuccino. Cantata, tucked inside the Al Attar Business Center on Al Barsha 1, is one of the few spots where the V60 sits at the centre of the menu. The baristas grind to order, weigh both the beans and the water, and time every pour. It is closer to a laboratory than to a busy chain.
The bigger reason to make the drive, though, is the beans themselves. Cantata sources premium aromatic coffee beans that carry natural flavour notes: bright citrus, stone fruit, cocoa, floral hints depending on the origin and roast. Crucially, nothing is added. No sugar, no flavour syrups, no artificial aromas soaked into the beans. The aroma you smell is the coffee, developed during roasting and preserved by careful storage. In the UAE market, where flavoured and sweetened blends dominate the shelves, that combination of premium aromatic beans with zero additives is genuinely hard to find anywhere else.
A good V60 should taste like the fruit the coffee tree grew, not like the syrup a marketing team invented.
What Makes a V60 Actually Good
V60 is a pour-over method invented by Hario in Japan. The name comes from the 60-degree cone angle of the dripper. It sounds like a small detail, but that geometry, combined with a spiral rib pattern and a large single hole at the bottom, is what gives V60 its signature clarity. Water flows through the coffee bed evenly and drains fast, extracting the delicate aromatic compounds without pulling out the heavy, bitter ones.
Get it right and the cup is tea-like, almost translucent, with flavours you can name one by one. Get it wrong and it is either sour water or a flat, muddy brew. Three things separate the two outcomes: the quality and freshness of the beans, the grind size, and the pour technique. Cantata controls all three obsessively, which is why the results are consistent visit after visit.
What to Order When You Visit
If it is your first time, ask the barista which single-origin they are running that week and let them pick the roast that suits your palate. Ethiopian naturals tend to lean fruity and floral. Colombian and Kenyan lots often push into red berry and citrus. If you usually take milk and sugar, resist the urge here. The whole point of this cup is to taste the bean as it is. A glass of still water on the side is all you need to reset between sips.
How to Brew V60 the Right Way at Home
Once you have tasted a proper cup, you will want to reproduce it. The good news is that V60 gear is cheap and widely available in Dubai. A plastic or ceramic dripper, a pack of filters, a gooseneck kettle, a scale, and a burr grinder will get you 90 percent of the way there. The other 10 percent is technique. Follow the steps below and adjust one variable at a time until the cup tastes the way you want.
- Weigh 15 g of beans and grind medium-fine. The texture should feel like table salt between your fingers. Too fine and the water will stall; too coarse and the cup will taste thin and sour.
- Heat 250 g of water to about 92 to 94 degrees Celsius. If you do not have a temperature-controlled kettle, boil the water and let it sit for 30 seconds before pouring.
- Rinse the paper filter with hot water. This removes any papery taste and pre-heats the dripper and server. Discard the rinse water.
- Add the ground coffee, tap the dripper flat, and start the timer. Pour 45 g of water in a slow spiral from the centre outward. This is the bloom, when trapped CO2 escapes. Wait 30 to 40 seconds.
- Pour the next 100 g of water in a steady spiral, finishing around the 1:15 mark. Keep the water level below the top of the filter.
- Add the final 105 g of water in a slower pour, finishing around 1:45. Total water should now be 250 g.
- Let the bed drain fully. The whole brew should finish between 2:45 and 3:15. Swirl the server, pour, and drink within a minute or two while the aromatics are still alive.
Small Details That Change the Cup
- Water matters. Dubai tap water is heavily treated. Use filtered or bottled water with a moderate mineral content. Distilled water will produce a flat, lifeless cup.
- Buy beans roasted within the last four weeks. Cantata prints roast dates on the bag, which is the standard you should expect anywhere serious.
- Grind right before brewing. Pre-ground coffee loses most of its aromatic compounds within days.
- Taste before you tweak. If the cup is sour, grind finer or pour hotter. If it is bitter, grind coarser or lower the temperature by two degrees.
Where to Sit and Drink It
Cantata inside the Al Attar Business Center on Al Barsha 1 is easy to reach from Sheikh Zayed Road and has parking in the building. The space is quiet, which matters when you are trying to taste something as delicate as a light-roast Ethiopian. Bring a book, order the V60 of the week, and give yourself half an hour with no phone. That is really all pour-over asks of you, and in return you get one of the most honest cups of coffee available anywhere in the UAE.
Frequently asked questions
Where is the best V60 coffee in Dubai?
The most consistent V60 in Dubai is brewed at Cantata inside the Al Attar Business Center on Al Barsha 1. They use premium aromatic single-origin beans with no sugar, syrups or additives, and every cup is weighed, timed and ground to order.
What is V60 coffee and how is it different from espresso?
V60 is a pour-over filter method that uses a cone-shaped dripper with a 60-degree angle, invented by Hario in Japan. Hot water is poured slowly over medium-fine ground coffee and drips through a paper filter into a server.
The result is a clean, tea-like cup that highlights delicate aromatic notes. Espresso is short, concentrated and pressurised; V60 is longer, lighter and shows the character of the bean much more clearly.
Why does Cantata’s V60 taste different from other Dubai cafes?
Two reasons. First, the beans are premium aromatic lots with no added flavourings or sweeteners, which is unusual in the UAE market where flavoured blends are common. Second, the brewing process is strict: fresh roast dates, precise ratios, controlled water temperature and consistent pour timing. Those small details compound into a very different cup.
What ratio of coffee to water should I use for V60 at home?
A reliable starting point is 1 gram of coffee to about 16 to 17 grams of water. For a single cup that means 15 grams of beans and 250 grams of water. Adjust from there based on taste: more water for a lighter cup, less for a stronger one.
What grind size works best for V60?
Medium-fine, roughly the texture of table salt. If your brew finishes in under two minutes and tastes sour, grind finer. If it takes longer than three and a half minutes and tastes bitter or muddy, grind coarser. Change one setting at a time so you can tell what actually moved the flavour.
Can I make good V60 with tap water in Dubai?
It is not ideal. Dubai tap water is heavily treated and can dull the aromatic notes that make V60 worth brewing. Use filtered or bottled water with a moderate mineral content. Avoid distilled or fully demineralised water, which produces a flat, hollow cup.
Do I need a gooseneck kettle for V60?
Strongly recommended. The narrow spout lets you control the flow rate and pour in a steady spiral, which keeps the coffee bed even. You can improvise with a regular kettle, but your brews will be less consistent and harder to troubleshoot.