Buy Coffee Makers from Canada
(additional shipping options at checkout)
- Each purchase includes 8-oz sample of coffee
- European quality at Canada prices
- Better flavour retention than paper filters
- Satisfaction Guaranteed
- Add coffee beans for Free Shipping Over $59!
Also see: French Presses
Warranty
- Your satisfaction is 100% guaranteed
- Backed by personal GROSCHE customer service. Please contact GROSCHE directly if we can help you in any way, we will do our best to make sure you are 100% satisfied with your purchase.
- Please contact GROSCHE for all warranty needs. Please ensure you have your original product receipt with purchase date and price paid for all warranty needs.
- Note that in extreme cases it is possible to crack borosilicate glass from thermal shock. For example, pouring boiling liquid from the vessel and submerging it in cold water may cause damage.
Coffee Makers including pour overs and stove-top espresso makers are some of the most convenient and best ways to make coffee. Unlike other brands of pour-overs, these use a stainless steel mesh filter which doesn't remove the essential oils from the coffee, leaving all of the delicious flavours intact.
These coffee makers are on par with the likes of Chemex, Kalita and Hario and are backed by a satisfaction guarantee.
Drip Coffee Machines heats the water internally, then runs it through ground coffee placed in a paper filter. The biggest benefit to drip coffee makers is that you can make many cups simultaneously, and the coffee is collected in a pot sitting on a hot plate to keep it warm. Drip coffee makers have been the standard for the most part of the 20th century.
Espresso Machines make a concentrated form of coffee in a specialty machine. Similar to a drip coffee maker, it heats the water and runs it through a steel-meshed filter at high pressure. Espresso is typically 1/8th the quantity of coffee, but at a much stronger concentration. Espresso machines are the first step for creating lattes that can be flavoured with flavoured syrups.
French Presses brew coffee by pouring pre-heated water (just before boiling point) onto coarsely ground coffee, waiting for 4-5 minutes then plunging the mesh to cease the brewing process. They are known to create much stronger coffees that retain all their essential oils because it's not passed through a paper filter. Coffee aficionados swear that french presses produce a much more exquisite tasting coffee.
Moka Pots (also known as stove-top espresso makers) are heavy duty steel machines that are literally placed on a stove pot. Using an ingenuitive 3 compartment system, water is actually forced upwards through the coffee grounds into the top chamber. The diagram on the linked page explains. Like a french press, there are no paper filters which creates a much more genuine coffee taste.
Coffee percolators actually cycles water through a heat pump and coffee grounds repeatedly, getting stronger with each pass. These are typically fun to try (if you know someone who can use it), but don't make the best coffee makers.
Other Styles of Coffee Makers
Single pod coffee makers can sometimes be compatible only with their specific brand, especially in the case of coffee pods or "cups". There are multiple types of coffee makers, giving you a wide variety of options to choose from when making your morning coffee. The 5 most popular are: Drip Coffee Maker, Single Cup Coffee Maker, Espresso machine, French Press, Moka Pot and the Percolator.
Currently the most popular is the Keurig single serve machine, which uses k-cups and a patented brewing system to produce a consistent brew. As the name suggests, they're a single serve machine that can only brew 1 cup at a time. This is made up for by the convenience of very simple operation and a wide number of flavours. The number of possible coffees used in this machine can be opened up to all of the coffee world with a Perfect Pod EZ Cup. Single serve brewers have come under fire for using k-cups that are not recyclable, causing massive amounts of waste.