As i live in Finland, where wintertimes you have daylight depending of location from 1- 5h daylight time.. here whe drink usually 3-5 cups of cafe... 90% people have Moccamasters for a reason. Really makes the best taist cafe and very fast. The thing that it has many parts is good.. you can thrown them all into dischwacher.. cafe machines get very greasy of that cafe fat.. that is annoying to clean. Also moccamasters work long. You get all the smal parts from local supermarkets... and the machine igself has 10y warranty.. but still have seen machines that are 20y old and work
hope you can help me. I am in each of a machine that makes the best coffee as hassle free as possible. I have a Phillips 3200 and the coffee is bitter no mater what bans and settings. I had a McMaster and that was not what i hoped. Thanks in advance.
Great video but for the consumer looking for a plastic free coffee maker in this day and age get a French press or pour over. If there is one please let us know.
Unfortunately there are no home brewers. Ratio looked promising but actually has an aluminum heater block that seems to leach into the water (not good). I found this out when I saw particles and opened it up. I found some small commercial brewers that have zero plastic, just Stainless Steel and Silicone gaskets. Bunn VP17-1 and Bunn CW15-TC. They make good coffee too, but only if you brew a larger batch. They come with plastic filter baskets, but they sell optional stainless steel baskets. The only problem is they are expensive, bulky and ugly for home use. I was able to find them secondhand white and expensive though.
Can you please please please do a review on the brewers that have the LEAST plastic parts. Can’t find a review like that. With glass carafes preferably 😁
Great information Ryan. I am confused between ratio 6 and bonavita enthusiast. Was trying to understand out of the 2 in which one does the coffee tend to stay warmer for longer? Also which one fairs better in terms of after sales service and ease of availability of spare parts. Thirdly, is the ratio 6 carafe easier to clean or the bonavita one?
Ratio will brew hotter coffee and keep it hot for good while. They are also more reliable than Bonavita in terms of after-sales support. Bonavita has gone black and dropped off the map completely two different times, including right now.
Can you do one that doesn't come into contact with any plastics during the whole brewing (and liquid storage) process? Not a fan of having microplastics in my drink.
Best coffee I ever had was made from a futuristic looking machine with a clear body, stainless, and copper internals. Wish I could figure out what it was. Really don't want my coffee cooking in plastic.
It depends on how you're using the brewer. For simple, repeatable hot coffee, the KBT is probably the best option. If you like to tinker and explore iced coffee/cold brew the Breville is a great choice.
I believe Technivorum KBT was just updated to a thermal carafe with glass liner? Seems to be the holy grail of thermal carafe. Would appreciate your thoughts I am shopping now. Thanks
Yes, there does appear to be a glass liner now. We have not had a chance to see it in person. Unfortunately, our demo unit is a little bit older! The Enthusiast should be back in stock sometime in June. Cheers!
Did the Bonavita Enthusiast product get pulled off the market? It is not available at Prima’s website and everywhere else I can find it listed. The product page was also taken down from Bonavita’s official website. Seems strange since it was only launched a few months ago.
There's a V.2 coming with automatic stop feature. Seems like some people got them already but the reviews were not stellar. I'm wondering why they bothered when most were very happy with the first version. Looking at the Ratio and Moccamaster as a result. Or just wait it out and see what happens.
@@upnhere8513 What did you end up with? I returned the Enthusiast. The new lid sucks. The coffee literally brews on top of a plastic knob and then into the carafe. I tried a Moccamaster but the taste was subpar for the price point, especially when brewing half batches. I ended up with another Bonavita Connosseur and am happy even if the QC is lousy. It does brew a delicious cup with relative ease.
I bought two cheap machimes , Mr Coffee and Cuisinart and the coffee tastes bad from both . I use Starbucks or other good coffee in the machines, You say the Bonavita machine makes the best tasting coffee. Is it water temperature, brewing time or something else that makes the Bonavita taste better? The Cuisinart has a large diameter water dispenser.
Good question! Edge-to-Edge water dispersion is one thing that the Bonavita does very well, and water temperature is another major factor. Every brewer in this video will consistently hit temps above 200F and extract more than a cuisinart/mr. coffee is able to.
@@primacoffeeequipment My Cuisinart has the edge to edge water dispersal feature and I use premium coffee but the coffee tastes weak . When I use more coffee the taste isn't improved. I'm surprised Cuisinart gets good reviews. I might buy the Bonavita eventually but right now I'll just use my espresso machine .
Thanks for a great review. I guess the real question is if they all make a great cup of coffee that you'll enjoy in the morning? I'm always drawn to usability and the Breville appeals to me very much for that reson, but I'm concerned if I'll sacrifice too much coffee flavour for usability.
Thanks for the question. It really depends on how discerning and particular you are about your coffee, but I certainly wouldn't complain if I had the Breville at home :) Every brewer here (with maybe the exception of technivorms) is capable of some world-class coffee extractions.
This can be a great 3 minute video!!!! All I need to know is which machine brews the best cup of coffee. All the other mumbo jumbo is unnecessary "Fluff"..
Capresso beats these all hands down. From drip brew to grind and brew, nothing beats Capresso. No paper filters, additional water filter, glass and thermal carafe options, & reliability with more affordability and durability/longevity.
Great video fun and informative, nicely done, beautiful drip coffee brewers
Thanks for watching!
As i live in Finland, where wintertimes you have daylight depending of location from 1- 5h daylight time.. here whe drink usually 3-5 cups of cafe... 90% people have Moccamasters for a reason. Really makes the best taist cafe and very fast. The thing that it has many parts is good.. you can thrown them all into dischwacher.. cafe machines get very greasy of that cafe fat.. that is annoying to clean. Also moccamasters work long. You get all the smal parts from local supermarkets... and the machine igself has 10y warranty.. but still have seen machines that are 20y old and work
I appreciate the honesty here. I hate the QC of Bonavita but it easily makes the best tasting cup and I've owned a Moccamaster.
I have the KBT in use for 20 years now and the quality of the machine and the quality of the coffee it makes are remarkable.
Great review. Thx’s
Sure thing!
Just can’t beat the Technivorm.
It's true!
Subjective.... but many people agree with you.
hope you can help me. I am in each of a machine that makes the best coffee as hassle free as possible. I have a Phillips 3200 and the coffee is bitter no mater what bans and settings. I had a McMaster and that was not what i hoped. Thanks in advance.
Great video but for the consumer looking for a plastic free coffee maker in this day and age get a French press or pour over. If there is one please let us know.
Unfortunately there are no home brewers. Ratio looked promising but actually has an aluminum heater block that seems to leach into the water (not good). I found this out when I saw particles and opened it up.
I found some small commercial brewers that have zero plastic, just Stainless Steel and Silicone gaskets. Bunn VP17-1 and Bunn CW15-TC. They make good coffee too, but only if you brew a larger batch. They come with plastic filter baskets, but they sell optional stainless steel baskets. The only problem is they are expensive, bulky and ugly for home use. I was able to find them secondhand white and expensive though.
@@gabrielo8922 thank you for posting this and bringing attention to alum. in the build design of some of these.
Can you please please please do a review on the brewers that have the LEAST plastic parts. Can’t find a review like that. With glass carafes preferably 😁
We can add that idea to our production list! Are you interested only in auto brewers, or would you want manual brewers included?
So hard to find an automatic plastic free coffee machine. Dont understand why more people arent concerned about this!
@@primacoffeeequipment automatic please.
Ratio 6 with Ratio glass carafe (also used in the ratio 8) is a no plastic coffee maker.
What is the water filter jug that you’re using?
Great information Ryan. I am confused between ratio 6 and bonavita enthusiast. Was trying to understand out of the 2 in which one does the coffee tend to stay warmer for longer? Also which one fairs better in terms of after sales service and ease of availability of spare parts. Thirdly, is the ratio 6 carafe easier to clean or the bonavita one?
Ratio will brew hotter coffee and keep it hot for good while. They are also more reliable than Bonavita in terms of after-sales support. Bonavita has gone black and dropped off the map completely two different times, including right now.
35 years of heavy coffee experience says: Moccamaster! 👍🏼💪🏼❤️☕️
Can you do one that doesn't come into contact with any plastics during the whole brewing (and liquid storage) process? Not a fan of having microplastics in my drink.
Sadly there just aren't enough premium plastic-less options out there for a comparison video!
Have you tried out the 12 cup OXO thermal?
The last mentioned Moccamaster has 9 conic holes and wets the coffee as I have never seen before! It lasts 5 year warrenty.
Best coffee I ever had was made from a futuristic looking machine with a clear body, stainless, and copper internals. Wish I could figure out what it was. Really don't want my coffee cooking in plastic.
How about breville precision brewer vs breville grind control?
Hi I really can't decide between the Breville Precision, Techniform KBT, and OXO 9 Cup. Is the extra $100 worth it?
It depends on how you're using the brewer. For simple, repeatable hot coffee, the KBT is probably the best option. If you like to tinker and explore iced coffee/cold brew the Breville is a great choice.
I just want a reliable coffee maker that brews great coffee. Technivorn and Bonavita fit that bill.
Mr. Coffee 7 cup Easy Plez
Bonavita Enthusiast excites me. Easy Plez also
@@larrywong7834quite a few others too as even bonavita is out of stock
I believe Technivorum KBT was just updated to a thermal carafe with glass liner? Seems to be the holy grail of thermal carafe. Would appreciate your thoughts I am shopping now. Thanks
Also, I can't find the Enthusiast anywhere? Out of stock on your website any idea of when these will be available?
Yes, there does appear to be a glass liner now. We have not had a chance to see it in person. Unfortunately, our demo unit is a little bit older! The Enthusiast should be back in stock sometime in June. Cheers!
what about the cafe specialty series?
Did the Bonavita Enthusiast product get pulled off the market? It is not available at Prima’s website and everywhere else I can find it listed. The product page was also taken down from Bonavita’s official website. Seems strange since it was only launched a few months ago.
As far as we know it's on an extended back order, expected to be availble by Fall 2024.
There's a V.2 coming with automatic stop feature. Seems like some people got them already but the reviews were not stellar. I'm wondering why they bothered when most were very happy with the first version. Looking at the Ratio and Moccamaster as a result. Or just wait it out and see what happens.
@@upnhere8513 What did you end up with? I returned the Enthusiast. The new lid sucks. The coffee literally brews on top of a plastic knob and then into the carafe. I tried a Moccamaster but the taste was subpar for the price point, especially when brewing half batches. I ended up with another Bonavita Connosseur and am happy even if the QC is lousy. It does brew a delicious cup with relative ease.
I bought two cheap machimes , Mr Coffee and Cuisinart and the coffee tastes bad from both . I use Starbucks or other good coffee in the machines, You say the Bonavita machine makes the best tasting coffee. Is it water temperature, brewing time or something else that makes the Bonavita taste better? The Cuisinart has a large diameter water dispenser.
Good question! Edge-to-Edge water dispersion is one thing that the Bonavita does very well, and water temperature is another major factor. Every brewer in this video will consistently hit temps above 200F and extract more than a cuisinart/mr. coffee is able to.
@@primacoffeeequipment My Cuisinart has the edge to edge water dispersal feature and I use premium coffee but the coffee tastes weak . When I use more coffee the taste isn't improved. I'm surprised Cuisinart gets good reviews. I might buy the Bonavita eventually but right now I'll just use my espresso machine .
@@chrislastnam6822 It could be a grind size issue, but it is more likely a temperature issue.
Thanks for a great review. I guess the real question is if they all make a great cup of coffee that you'll enjoy in the morning? I'm always drawn to usability and the Breville appeals to me very much for that reson, but I'm concerned if I'll sacrifice too much coffee flavour for usability.
Thanks for the question. It really depends on how discerning and particular you are about your coffee, but I certainly wouldn't complain if I had the Breville at home :) Every brewer here (with maybe the exception of technivorms) is capable of some world-class coffee extractions.
Breville hand down the best
Which is the best?
This can be a great 3 minute video!!!! All I need to know is which machine brews the best cup of coffee. All the other mumbo jumbo is unnecessary "Fluff"..
Capresso beats these all hands down. From drip brew to grind and brew, nothing beats Capresso.
No paper filters, additional water filter, glass and thermal carafe options, & reliability with more affordability and durability/longevity.
They all have plastic parts that touch the water and or coffee, so none of them are good.
Thank you for sharing! Kevin & Patti King here at Lake Hamilton Bible Camp. In Hot Springs, Arkansas. 71913
Great roundup! The Keurig K-Express seems like a game changer with that strong brew feature. Perfect for my busy mornings! ☕ @homekitdecor
No Zojirushi? 🫤