☕ Grind, Brew, Repeat: Elevate your coffee game!
The OXOBrew Conical Burr Coffee Grinder in Matte Black features stainless steel conical burrs for consistent grind size, 15 adjustable settings for various brewing methods, a large-capacity hopper, and a UV-blocking tint to protect your beans. With a user-friendly one-touch start and a 2-year warranty, this grinder is designed for coffee enthusiasts who demand quality and convenience.
Item Dimensions L x W x H | 7.75"L x 5.3"W x 12.8"H |
Item Weight | 4.47 Pounds |
Style Name | Matte Black Burr Coffee Grinder |
Color | Matte Black |
Specific Uses For Product | Grinding |
Recommended Uses For Product | Grinding |
Capacity | 0.75 Pounds |
Material Type | Stainless Steel |
M**N
Excellent grinder. Only minor flaws.
(I am an ex professional barista.)CONS:-The grounds container doesn't lock into place and will sometimes vibrate out during grinding. This is the only serious flaw with the product, and I feel it's a minor one. I've gone through many of the reviews and it seems that it's simply a matter of construction inconsistency. Most people's containers "click" into place; a minority do not. I was just unlucky enough to get one of the ones that don't.-You can't remove the bottom burr to clean it. They really did do their best to make this easy to clean and I appreciate that you don't have to undo a bunch of microscopic screws just to clean your burrs, but I really wish I could remove BOTH burrs to give them a thorough wipe-down. It's difficult to clean the one that's stuck inside the grinder. The other lifts out easily by a cute little handle.PROS:-High quality, consistent grind. The brewing methods I use most all hover around the medium grind range, so I haven't really tested the extremes of coarse and fine. Can't speak to those. But as far as the medium ranges, it grinds beautifully and consistently. That's what matters in the end, right?-The beans feed very well, even for single dosing. Never an issue.-As mentioned above, the ability to clean the grinder is taken into account in the construction. No need to delicately deconstruct the whole thing and keep track of a bunch of itty bitty screws and springs. The top part of the grinder and the top burr simply turn-and-lift out, and then turn-and-lock back into place. So nice.-It's aesthetically pleasing and takes up little room on the counter. All the materials have a quality feel.-It isn't super noisy. All grinders are gonna make noise, to be sure, but as far as grinders go, this one has a pretty gentle sound. I've definitely used my fair share of grinders that made me feel like my brain was going to vibrate out of my skull, and this one has a polite hum by comparison.-The price for this level of quality is unbeatable. I can't even believe I paid less than one hundred dollars for this. Real talk, folks: these are steel conical burrs. Solid construction. 40+ grind settings. Did I mention steel conical burrs? I never thought I would own something like this for less than $250. You cannot beat this price point/quality intersection. You just can't. This grinder is price-meets-quality king.USAGE:You're working with three variables: time, grind, and amount. There are two popular approaches to working out your dose.Method 1: You leave 'amount' as the open variable. With this method, you dump all your beans in the hopper and store them there. You then adjust grind and time until you're getting the right dose at the right grind level.Method 2: You leave 'time' as the open variable. With this method, you only deposit the amount of beans you plan to use for each dose, adjust the grind as needed, and let it take whatever amount of time it takes. You're adjusting the amount and the grind, rather than adjusting the grind and the time. (This is called "single dosing.")Go to any coffee forum, and you'll be pages of debate about which of these methods is superior. Honestly, you should use the method that feels best for YOU.The reason I bring it up here is because people seem anxious that Method #2 will damage the burrs over time, since you run them all the way to empty every time you grind.Here's my take: I use Method #2, because I feel that the beans start to taste stale if left in the hopper. (Everyone's tastebuds are different; there's no right or wrong.) This means that I let the burrs run until I hear the sound change from a low growl to a high pitched growl, which indicates that the burrs are grinding empty, and then I manually stop the grind.I honestly don't see any issue with this, and I don't feel any anxiety about it. Think about it: if you're cleaning the burrs between bean swaps, you're letting them run for several seconds on empty anyway. Even the manufacturer instructions tell you to do this when cleaning the burrs! The only difference here is that instead of intentionally running them on empty for several seconds to clean them, you're running them on empty for one single second every day/dose. I'd never recommend doing that on a fine espresso setting, but as long as you're in the medium-to-coarse range, I don't see any possible ways the burrs could damage each other. There's no way the burrs are touching at that distance, regardless of variables like heat expanding the metal and other things coffee nerds like to debate about.I hope this review was helpful. I'll update in a year to let you know if this grinder held up through daily use.
I**Y
Consistent, solid, reliable, ready to go the distance
Solid build, consistently excellent grind, this has turned out to be a great choice for a coffee grinder for the long haul.I'll admit to being an anachronism: I still use a percolator for my daily brew, having tried all the others. An ancient stainless steel 12 cup Farberware keeps chugging along, churning out great coffee, morning after morning.But the grind! You just can't buy pre-ground coffee that's right for a percolator anymore: they're all ground too fine.So a burr grinder is the way to go. The Oxo has a wide range of grind settings, and 13.5 works well for a percolator; you want visible flakes, not sand, not powder. The Oxo delivers.I don't leave beans stored in the hopper: I toss in a scant cup of whole beans for a 12 cup brew. A bit noisy, but that comes with the territory. There's a timer for the grind, but I just leave it set for maximum time, and then a second press of the button shuts the motor off after the hopper clears; it takes about twenty seconds for that cup of whole beans.Good solid machine! Recommended!
S**Y
Game Changer
This grinder is incredible. I started with a small Krups stainless steel blade grinder and wanted to upgrade to something better and more automatic. I drink French Roast and make is as strong as possible. So the power grind form the stainless blades was actually good for me.I tried the large Krups burr grinder first. That was a big mistake. It didn’t grind that small even on the finest setting. The beans kept jamming until I smacked it hard. It also had so much static none of the grind was in the bottom of the cup. It spread grinds all over the counter. It was just a mess that didn’t work at all.This grinder has none of those issue. I set it on 1, the finest setting. It makes a wonderfully fine grind. There are no jams. I grind drops to the bottom of the cup.The only down side is the 30 second grind time maximum setting. I have to press the button twice for a full pot of coffee. I can live with that. This is a really great product for strong French Roast coffee.
R**E
This checks all the boxes
This checks all the boxes. We grind our own coffee every morning for a fresh cup. While there are many coffee grinders that do a good job, most that do are quite expensive. And those that are more reasonably priced often are not very consistent in their grind. But this oxo grinder checks all the boxes. Its price is very reasonable, only $89. And the grind quality is very consistent, no matter whether you need a coarse grind, fine grind, or something in between. It comes out well every time. It has a stainless steel container, so no plastic container with grinds sticking to the sides, it empties out every time. The reservoir holds about 10 or 12 ounces of beans, and is shaded so it keeps the beans from too much light. You just turn the reservoir to the grind you prefer. It has a dial that you just turn to set the timer to grind the amount you’ll need very easy to clean, you reach in, turn the spindle to unlock the reservoir which closes off the bottom so no beans spill out, lift it up, then grab the bail on the inner grinder turn it counterclockwise and lift it out to clean everything out. A very nice grinder that we can highly recommend.