The Best Drip Coffee Makers, Reviewed by Our Experts (2025)

The Best Drip Coffee Makers, Reviewed by Our Experts (2025)

If you’re in the market for a drip coffee maker, chances are good you’re looking for two things: lots of coffee and little effort. But the best drip coffee makers offer so much more than that. Drip coffee machines used to be exceedingly simple things. You’d fill them with water; they’d boil it and shower it down over coffee grounds. But now you don’t have to miss out on quality coffee because you prefer a simple brewer—companies like Technivorm, Breville, Fellow, and Ratio make easy-to-use drip coffee machines that brew pots of flavorful joe that rival what you’d get from a fancy pour-over or French press.

Lots of automatic drip machines now take into account the role that things water temperature, bloom time, and flow rate play in extracting the best flavor. It’s a level of engineering and technology that previously only existed in espresso machines.



Read on to see how 21 machines fared in our testing: which ones make a good cup of coffee, which ones make a great cup of coffee, and which ones just can’t keep up with today’s coffee brewing arms race.

In this article

New in this update: We tested GE’s Grind and Brew that comes with a built-in grinder and a spiffy looking machine from Melitta, which is a brand you’re probably familiar with from their ubiquitous coffee filters. We also removed the Zojirushi Zutto from our short list of top picks, not because anything changed in our use of the machine, but because its price is no longer so different from our budget choice that it offers a different value prop.


The best drip coffee maker overall: Fellow Aiden

Fellow Aiden Precision Coffee Maker

Pros

  • Fully customizable
  • Easy to use with default settings
  • Best-tasting coffee of every machine we tested
  • Sleek design

Cons

Fellow has a knack for coffee equipment that’s both beautiful and effective, and the brand’s first attempt at an automatic brewer fits right in with everything else. It’s as close to a perfect drip coffee maker as we’ve tried yet because its designers considered almost every conceivable need. It has profiles with different water temperatures and brewing times for light, medium, and dark roasts. It also tells you exactly how much ground coffee to use to get the best flavor in both grams and tablespoons.

But even with all its bells and whistles, the Aiden still had to make coffee that tastes good. And it did. We compared it side-by-side to carafes of pour-over and both hit fruity and caramel notes, with real nuance and depth of flavor. If anything, the Aiden’s coffee went down a little easier.

What we love about the Ratio Six

The Aiden is customizable across so many parameters you might lose track: You can set water temperature (anywhere between 122℉ and 210℉); the time and number of pulses of water (think of them as the individual water pours if you were making pour-over coffee); and bloom time, during which CO2 (which can make your coffee taste sour) is released from the grounds. This machine can also make a smooth pot of cold brew by slowly dripping water over the course of several hours. (Machines that claim they can make cold brew in minutes don’t usually live up to their own hype.)

That sounds like a lot, but the Aiden is surprisingly straightforward to use. It has a single dial and button and an easy-to-read LCD screen, and clear on-screen instructions. And even though you can tweak your coffee in all these ways, you can also just use the Aiden like a basic, one-button drip coffee maker. The Instant Brew option will brew however much water is in the tank using water temperatures recommended by the Specialty Coffee Association in its Golden Cup standards, which marks water temperature and coffee-to-water ratios for ideal flavor. To paraphrase Fellow’s founder who visited us in the test kitchen, he wanted the machine to work for both coffee connoisseurs and for total noobs.

The Aiden also features a slew of carefully considered, where-have-you-been-my-whole-life details. Its two filter baskets, one for three cups or fewer and one for more than three cups, have spring loaded seals to prevent drips when you remove them to empty the grounds into the garbage. It doesn’t have a hot plate because it doesn’t need one—the included thermal carafe kept coffee hot on the dining room table for around two hours. The Aiden also has a removable side water tank, which is easier to fill than either a built-in tank or one on the backside of the machine.

Check out an even more detailed run down on the Aiden here.

It’s expensive—the most expensive brewer we tested. Even though it doesn’t cost that much more than other high-end machines from Ratio or Breville, $365 (at the time of writing) is a lot to pay for a drip coffee maker.

The only other small quibble we have with the Fellow is that switching from the small filter basket to the bigger one totally seamless. All you have to do is toggle a knob, but it’s just not as smooth an operation as changing the Aiden’s multitude of other settings.

Capacity: 10 cups
Carafe style: Thermal
Dimensions: 8.9″ x 8.9″ x 12″
Weight: 9.6 lb.
Features: Adjustable brew water ratio; adjustable temperature settings, flavor profile settings, programmable 24-hour timer; Wi-Fi connectivity; cold-brew capable; SCA Golden Cup capabilities
Warranty: 3 years

Back to the top

The best simple drip coffee maker: Ratio Six

Pros

  • One button operation and pour-over quality
  • Top performing thermal carafe

Cons

  • Fixed water tank is annoying to fill

The Fellow Aiden is a great coffee maker but it has a lot going on. We know that some people’s ideal drip coffee maker is one you load up with coffee, turn on, and leave to do its thing. The Ratio Six (which is actually an 8-cup coffee maker, don’t let the name fool you) lets you do just that without compromising on the quality of the brew.

What we love about the Ratio Six

It’s got one button that begins the brew process. There is no water temperature to set, no flavor profiles to adjust. But the brewing process, like the Fellow’s, is designed to mimic a pour-over. The Ratio first blooms the coffee then uses a slower flow to get better extraction. The resulting brew is absolutely delicious and takes no effort on your part.

The newest version of the Ratio Six has an improved thermal carafe that outperformed all the others we tried (the Fellow was a close second), keeping coffee hot for over two hours.

The Ratio’s fixed water tank at the back of the appliance is a real bear to fill. We either had to set the machine sideways on the counter or slide it out from under a cabinet to fill with water. The brew basket also sits on top of the carafe instead of being attached to the body in any way. That made it easy to empty, but was a little precarious to set up until we got the hang of it.

Capacity: 8 cups
Carafe style: Thermal 
Dimensions: 13.” x 6.5″ x 14.25″ 
Weight: 8 lb. 
Features: Blooms coffee, SCA Golden Cup capabilities
Warranty: 5 years

Back to the top

The best big coffee maker: Oxo 12-Cup Coffee Maker

Pros

  • Great coffee
  • Very good thermal carafe
  • Can make single-serve coffee

Cons

  • Doesn’t have detachable water reservoir

We don’t have any real issues with the quality of the coffee or the functionality of either the Fellow or Ratio coffee machines, but neither of them count as XL coffee makers in our book. The Oxo 12-cup machine gives you 20% more volume while still keeping the quality of the coffee very high. It uses a rainmaker shower head to evenly saturate the grounds, and the resulting coffee is the kind of nuanced, fresh-tasting carafe we’d expect from something at this price point. Still, there are a couple other features that push this one to the top of the pile.

What we love about the Oxo 12-Cup Coffee Maker

First is its range. It can brew anywhere from a single cup of coffee all the way up to 12 cups with no sacrifice on flavor or aroma. (Entertainers, take note: This means you can use the same machine to fuel both your normal weekday mornings and the occasional group brunch.) The Oxo also comes with a well-insulated stainless steel carafe that kept coffee warm enough to drink for almost two hours and has an intuitive digital interface with a dial and a brew button that make it easy to schedule your brew ahead of when you’ll need it.

This coffee maker also has plenty of the little design touches that define Oxo products, including a removable shower head for easy cleaning and filter holders that are flat on the bottom so you can set them on the counter or in the sink after a brew without them spilling everywhere.

Its water tank is built into the body of the machine, and while the opening isn’t particularly small, it’s still not as easy to fill as a removable reservoir.

Capacity: 12 cups
Carafe style: Thermal
Dimensions: 15″ x 10″ x 17″
Features: Single-serve and half-carafe option, programmable timer
Warranty: 2 years

Back to the top

The best budget drip coffee maker: Braun Brewsense

Braun KF7070 BrewSense 12-Cup Drip Coffeemaker

Pros

  • Under $100
  • Coffee is brewed at a drinkable temperature
  • Adjustable hot plate

Cons

Let’s get something straight about budget coffee makers off the bat: They don’t make coffee that’s as good as the machines that precisely regulate water temperature and flow rate. These are the style of coffee maker you might find at an adequate but not excellent Airbnb. So while the Braun is the top of its category (anything $100 or under), we didn’t judge it against the Fellow or the Ratio, but rather the Mr. Coffees, Ninjas, and Black & Deckers that you can read about below. And for a machine that you can often find on sale for less than $80, it did an admirable job! The coffee was flavorful and not at all stale or watery.

What we love about the Braun Brewsense

The Brewsense’s coffee came out at a ready-to-drink temperature. Contrast that with some cheap coffee makers that produce scalding coffee. Hey when it’s your first cup of the day, you want it now—not after it’s had a few minutes to cool down.

For such an inexpensive coffee maker, the Brewsense also came with some nice features like the ability to slow down the water flow in order to brew small batches and a hot plate with adjustable temperatures to keep coffee from getting burnt while it sits.

The glass carafe wasn’t our favorite. It flipped open a little too easily, which seemed like it could cause spills. And frankly, a thermal carafe would have been nice. Some other budget machines have them.

Capacity: 12 cups
Carafe style: Glass
Dimensions: 7.9” x 7.9” x 14.2”
Features: 1-4 cup options, adjustable brew strength, programmable timer, water filter, adjustable hot plate temperature
Warranty: 3 years

Back to the top

How we tested coffee makers

In short, we made copious amounts of coffee in these machines. To keep the brewing process as consistent as possible, we used the same beans from the same roaster in each test—a blend of Counter Culture coffee beans, freshly ground with a Fellow Ode burr grinder. If the coffee maker came with a reusable filter, we used that; otherwise we used standard Melitta paper filters.

If machines had features like a “bold” setting or the ability to brew half batches, we tested them to see what kind of difference the setting made (this was a particularly involved test with the Fellow and the Breville machines). For machines with thermal carafes, we used probe thermometers to test how long they kept coffee above 110℉.

How we judged these coffee makers

Did they make good coffee

The single most important thing you want from a drip coffee maker is a pot of coffee you actually want to drink. We looked for coffee makers that provided the most depth of flavor and nuance to their coffee. We discounted anything that made coffee that was burnt or watery.

The point of a drip machine is to deliver your morning coffee in large quantities with minimal thinking from you. That means it should be easy to fill and easy to operate. If a machine has lots of customizable options like the Fellow Aiden, we thought using them should still be straightforward enough that we could pick up their operation quickly.

Image may contain Cookware and Pot

Fellow’s on screen instructions lay out exactly how much coffee you need to use.

Noah Kaufman

Do they have special features and do those features work?

A number of machines offered the ability to precisely regulate temperature. Some came with thermal carafes. Most had the very basic, but very important ability to schedule a brew ahead of time. We used every single option available.

How do they look? How do they feel?

As drip coffee makers have advanced technologically they have also advanced aesthetically. We tested a number of machines that looked quite handsome on the countertop. We also noticed that a lot of the inexpensive machines felt too light and flimsy, which we consider an indicator that they may not last very long.

Back to the top

Other drip coffee makers we tested and liked

These machines, which include several of the fancier SCA-certified brewers as well as a number of simple, cheap ones, didn’t make our short list of top picks but they did well enough that we think you’ll be happy if you pick one up.

Breville Precision Brewer

Breville Precision Brewer

This is where the subjective part of our testing is going to show itself. The Breville Precision Brewer is, in many ways, the Fellow Aiden before there was a Fellow Aiden. It offers temperature control to a single degree, customizable bloom time and flow rate, different shaped filter baskets for different flavor profiles, and it even offers cold brew. We just liked the taste of the coffee from the Fellow more.

But this is a terrific machine that can do so many things. If you’re a general fan of Breville the brand or just like their whole stainless steel aesthetic, we recommend this one as a good high-end coffee maker without reservation.

Technivorm Moccamaster KBGV

Technivorm Moccamaster KBGV 10-Cup Coffee Maker

A longtime darling of both online coffee publications and coffee lovers, Technivorm Moccamaster machines were some of the first to stake a claim on good drip coffee. They were actually the first to receive the SCA Golden Cup cup standard stamp of approval. And indeed the coffee from the Moccamaster is tasty. It’s also simple in the way you’d traditionally expect a drip coffee maker to be. Just an on/off switch and a full pot/half pot switch.

Despite those two very big plusses, there are a few things that land the Moccamaster down here instead of up with our top picks. One is its look. Compared to the Ratio machine, which is just as simple but also offers extras like bloom time in the brewing process and a thermal carafe, the Technivorm takes up more counter space and doesn’t look nearly as sleek. But if you’re into the Technivorm’s diner coffee maker aesthetic (and I totally respect if that’s your thing) it is a high quality, long lasting coffee maker (the test kitchen has had the same one for more than four years).

Café Specialty Grind and Brew

Café Specialty Grind and Brew Coffee Maker

The Grind and Brew effectively toes the line between a simple, self-contained coffee maker and a techy, customizable one. The built-in grinder has six grind sizes and, while it’s not so nice or versatile that we’d pick it over a stand alone burr grinder, it gets the job done.

This machine has variable temperatures between 185℉ and 205℉ and can brew using the SCA’s Golden Cup standard. That made its coffee both very good and very consistent. And it’s a nice touch that you can easily switch between a setting for single cups and one for full carafes. Ultimately, it ended up in this middle space of not being able to do as much as the Fellow Aiden but holding a price tag that keeps it out of what we’d consider a “budget” range.

Café Specialty Drip Coffee Maker

Café Specialty Drip Coffee Maker

This is basically the Café Grind and Brew without the grinder or the single serve option, and at under $200 at the time of writing, the glass carafe model is actually priced low enough that we’d recommend it for someone who thinks the Fellow or the Ratio machines are a bridge too far for their wallet.

Like the Grind and Brew, you can use the SCA Golden Cup settings or customize water temperature between 185℉-205℉. Also like the Grind and Brew, the wide shower head evenly wets the coffee grounds and produces a high quality pot. If you already have a solid coffee grinder or are willing to invest in one, this is a drip machine to consider.

GE Profile Smart Grind and Brew

GE Profile Smart Grind & Brew Coffee Maker

GE is the parent company of Café, so we weren’t shocked to see some of the technology found in the Café Grind and Brew coffee maker used by the mother brand. The Profile makes one significant improvement over the Café Grind and Brew: It shrank its countertop footprint. Instead of stretching out longways across the counter like the Café, the GE better integrates the water tank snugly into the back of the machine for a coffee maker that fits much more comfortably in a variety of kitchens.

Otherwise it operates much like the Café. It allows for freshly ground single serve coffee, features an SCA golden cup setting, and has a user-friendly app that will get a fresh pot of coffee going from anywhere in the house. Like the Café version, we think the GE is good, but not great, and for just a little bit more money you can get one of our top picks. Finally, now that we’ve spent many months with both the Café and GE Grind and Brew models, we’ve found that the washable mesh filters let too many grounds wiggle their way into the coffee. We regularly found sediment at the bottom of our cups.

Zojirushi Zutto 5-Cup Coffee Maker

Zojirushi EC-DAC50 Zutto 5-Cup Drip Coffeemaker,Silver

Pros

  • Great value
  • Compact design
  • Removable water tank

Cons

  • Lacks temperature control of expensive machines
  • No thermal carafe

The unique design of this machine from the maker of our favorite rice cookers makes its footprint particularly tiny. The filter holder and coffee grounds sit inside the glass carafe, cutting several inches off its height. That kept the coffee a little hotter than some other machines, but it didn’t taste burnt or flat. This coffee maker is simple to use with just one on/off button, and has a removable water tank, which is an uncommon plus in an appliance this cheap. And cheap is the operative word. At only $70 at the time of writing it’s near the bottom of the price range of everything we tested, but still made pretty good coffee.

But, while it’s simple to use, it’s not completely intuitive. The single button does a couple things: brew coffee and adjust the hot plate. The second is not immediately clear and the instruction manual is not the most clearly written one we’ve ever come across.

Oxo Brew 9 Cup Coffee Maker

OXO Brew 9 Cup Stainless Steel Coffee Maker

The smaller of the two Oxo coffee makers we tested ticks the main boxes for a high-end drip machine: It has good temperature control between 197℉ and 204℉, comes with a thermal carafe that keeps coffee warm for well over an hour, and it blooms the coffee. And like so many of Oxo’s products it comes with some subtle but smart design choices like keeping the lid of the grounds container attached to the machine, choosing a dial controller instead of a lineup of buttons, adding a freshness timer so you know how long the brewed coffee has been sitting, and a cleaning indicator to let you know when it’s time for descaling.

On the flip side, the opening of the carafe is pretty narrow, so you’ll need to clean it with a bottle brush. Technically this machine does not have the Golden Cup standard (though it does keep its water in the proper temperature range). It also offers fewer options than the Fellow, but isn’t as simple as the one-button Ratio.

Zwilling Enfinigy Drip Coffee Maker

Zwilling Enfinigy Coffee Maker

Yet another machine that has won the Golden Cup standard (it’s become table stakes for “good” drip coffee makers at this point), the Zwilling Enfinigy makes coffee on par with the Café and Technivorm machines and is less expensive than all of them. Despite a high end look though, it’s also lighter weight, which makes it feel cheaper in comparison.

It has a number of standard features: the ability to brew between 2-12 cups, a timer to plan brews ahead, and a keep warm function. It also offers the curious feature of a bloom function that you can toggle on and off. Blooming coffee seems like all upside and no downside, so we can’t think of a good reason you’d ever want to toggle it off. Maybe you like off flavors in your coffee?

The Aarke machine is a beautiful, high quality coffee machine, no doubt about it. It brews coffee with temperature control precise enough to earn it a rating from the Specialty Coffee Association and has a couple other nice features like a bloom function that you can toggle on or off by holding the single button on the machine. It’s most effective when paired with Aarke’s burr grinder, which can read how much water is in the dripper and grind coffee to match. You can read our review of the complete system here, but you don’t need the grinder to make use of the brewer.

The issue with the Aarke is that it’s not as customizable as the Fellow and, if you want a thermal carafe, will cost you quite a bit more than the Ratio Six. But if you’re focused as much on aesthetics as you are on coffee, you might be ready to swallow the price bump.

Calphalon 14-Cup Programmable Coffee Maker

Calphalon Programmable 14-Cup Coffee Maker

This was the second best budget coffee maker we tried. The Calphalon’s coffee was just as good as what we got from our favorite Braun machine: rich, flavorful, more than we’d typically expect from a cheap coffee maker. It also had the same features, including the different settings for the hot plate. We thought the Braun’s interface was a little clearer to use—all the buttons are clearly labeled and in one line as opposed to the Calphalon, which has a couple buttons that felt sort of hidden away at the top of the machine. And while prices on these coffee makers can bounce around a little bit, the Calphalon is typically a little bit more expensive than the Braun.

Mr. Coffee 10-Cup Programmable Coffee Machine

Mr. Coffee Stainless Steel 10 Cup Programmable Coffee Maker

Mr. Coffee is sometimes used as shorthand for a cheap, meh coffee maker. But the brand has come a long way from the basic machine on your parents counter growing up. This is still a very affordable machine, but comes with a thermal carafe that kept coffee warm for about an hour and a detachable water reservoir that makes it easy to fill without spilling. The coffee itself was on the watery side, but was still perfectly drinkable.

Cuisinart Perfectemp 14-Cup Coffee. Maker With Glass Carafe

The big selling point of the Cuisinart Perfectemp is its size. It can brew 14 cups of coffee (that’s coffee sized cups—five ounces, not eight ounces). It makes adequate tasting coffee, and the 1-4 cup setting, which adjusts the extraction time for less water, still produces flavorful results. We didn’t notice much difference when switching between regular and bold strength though. Ultimately, testers liked the flavor and the extra features of the Braun, which put it over the top here.

Drip coffee makers we don’t recommend

Even though some of the coffee makers on this list make coffee that’s tasty enough, we think they either lack the features, design, or value of the machines up above.

Bonavita 8 Cup Coffee Maker

The Bonavita One Touch has the same irritating problem of balancing the filter basket on top of the carafe that the Ratio machine does, but unlike the Ratio machine, it doesn’t brew coffee so good as to overcome that issue. The coffee tastes fine, the carafe holds in heat well for over an hour, and it’s super simple to use, but at this price point you can get something better from a Café machine or a refurbished Technivorm.

Ninja 12-Cup Programmable Brewer

Ninja 12-Cup Programmable Coffee Brewer

As budget coffee goes, what we got from the Ninja was good, not great. It was a little more watery, and even on the “rich” setting tasted flatter than some machines’ regular coffee. The removable side water tank is a nice design touch, it’s easy to take off, refill, and replace. But there’s better cheap coffee out there.

Chemex Ottomatic Coffeemaker Set

Despite being the biggest name in pour-over coffee, Chemex’s attempt to automate the process didn’t work out so well. Testers preferred the coffee from all of the Golden Cup machines to this one, which just didn’t have quite the nuance and depth of flavor. If you watch the machine work though, you’d assume it would. It allowed for a bloom period and the water flow started and stopped in a way that mimics making pour-over. The Ottomatic is compatible with 3-, 6-, and 8-cup Chemex carafes, though you can also get an included carafe with the machine.

Cuisinart Classic Thermal

Cuisinart Classic Thermal 10-Cup Coffee Maker

This machine comes with a thermal carafe, which is a nice addition for a budget coffee maker, but the coffee tasted weak. It has a couple extra features like a timer and a reusable filter. This is a machine you wouldn’t be upset to find at an Airbnb or at your in-laws house, but we wouldn’t encourage you to run out and buy it for yourself.

Amazon Basics 12-Cup Digital Coffee Maker

Amazon Basics Programmable Coffeemaker

This is the cheapest coffee maker we tested and it shows. It comes with a delay timer to set a brew ahead of time, but that’s it. The coffee wasn’t undrinkable, but it certainly wasn’t memorable—a rather flavorless way to fill your body with caffeine in the morning. Because the difference in price between this and what we consider a nice budget coffee maker is only $30 or $40, we don’t think this one is worth it.

Hamilton Beach BrewStation

Hamilton Beach One Press Programmable Dispensing Drip Coffee Maker

Points to the Hamilton Beach BrewStation for trying something different. Instead of brewing into a carafe, the BrewStation brews coffee into a holding tank on the top half of the machine. Then, when you’re ready for coffee, you put a cup under and dispense it into your cup like you were getting a Pepsi at a gas station. If that doesn’t sound like the sort of system that would produce coffee that tastes very fresh, you are correct. It was stale and we weren’t excited to go back for another cup.

Black & Decker 12-Cup Coffee Maker

BLACK+DECKER 12-Cup Thermal Programmable Coffee maker

Despite trying quite a few inexpensive coffee makers, we didn’t have much really bad coffee, except from this machine. It tasted like dirt. And not in a “mmmm, I like the earthy undertones of this bean blend” dirt. Like actual dirt. It comes with a thermal carafe, which is impressive for a machine that costs around $60 at the time of writing. But you may want to fill that thermal carafe with coffee from a different machine.

This is, to my knowledge, Mr. Coffee’s first attempt to really play in the luxury coffee maker space. And retailing at $300 at the time of writing, it’s definitely got the price tag to be there. In terms of performance the coffee was on par with lots of the mid-tier machines I tested—nuanced, sometimes fruity. It too uses SCA standards for its brewing.

The thing that should justify the jump in price from say, the $150 Zwilling machine above, is the Mr Coffee’s ability to make quick cold brew in under 10 minutes. But I found the cold brew a little bit flat in flavor. Fine in a pinch, and if you didn’t want to go to the trouble of using a cold brew coffee maker, but not what you’d expect from immersion cold brew. If you’re planning to spend in this price range a number of the coffee makers above will serve you better. Do note that this Mr. Coffee also has tea and iced tea settings, which, while I didn’t consider them here, do make this a pretty versatile machine.

Melitta Vision 12-Cup Luxe Coffee Maker

Melitta Vision 12-Cup Luxe Coffee Maker

Let’s start with the good: The Melitta coffee maker is the only one I’ve ever seen that allows different configurations. The control panel rotates 270 degrees on the base of the machine so it can stretch across the counter from left to right (easier to fill with water) or back to front (a more compact footprint for smaller kitchens). It’s also a good looking machine—matte white with gold and wood accents.

But unfortunately the coffee was so-so. Even on the bold setting it lacked much flavor. The top of the fixed water tank was a little sticky and annoying to fill. If it cost $100 this would be a reasonable budget machine, especially with its aesthetics, but with prices ranging from $140 to over $200 depending which retailer you go to and which color you choose, we think there are better choices out there.

Back to the top

How do I make the best coffee with my drip coffee maker?

While your drip coffee maker will handle a lot of the work for you, the flavor of your drink will largely depend on the coffee you’re using, the quality of the hot water you’re using (this really does make a difference), and the ratio of coffee to water. Specific brew temperature is also important for proper flavor extraction, so if you can go with a drip coffee maker that has precise temperature controls or at least an accurate thermostat that controls the temperature within a small window, like one our top picks.

To make the best-tasting cup, always use freshly roasted, high-quality coffee beans at a medium grind size—buy whole beans and grind them right before you brew your coffee (here are our favorite coffee grinders). If you want to keep your beans fresher longer, keep them in a vacuum sealed container like this one. Use filtered water; some drip coffee machines, like the Café Specialty, have a built-in water filter that will take care of this for you. You’ll also want to use a scale to measure a coffee-to-water ratio of 1-to-16, or 16 grams of water for every gram of coffee. Start with this ratio, top hen feel free to play around and adjust according to your preference.

Back to the top

Additional testing by Jarrett Melendez

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *