Best Drip Coffee Maker

I have an old Cuisinart. No carafe, it serves cafeteria style, into any cup you put on underneath the pour. (Coffee on demand?) I don't think it is made anymore.

It says 12 cups, but with careful measurement i have determined that each cup is less than 5.2 fl oz. Come on. I brew with a measured 36 fl.oz. which the machine thinks is almost 7 cups, but is in reality about 4 mugs of coffee.

Some of the latest designs have a way to dispense hot water. For tea I presume. I would MUCH rather have a way to dispense cold half and half. All you drip coffee makers take note. Create a no-carafe cafeteria style drip machine that dispenses cold half and half and you will be rich!
 
Hey guys,

I've been becoming very frustrated trying to decide on which premium drip coffee maker to replace my Mr Coffee with. Reading all the reviews on amazon and google, it seems like every popular machine either doesn't last long enough, are made with cheap parts, produces a funny taste, leaks, or doesn't keep the coffee hot enough. I figured I would give it a shot in the forums. I've been purchasing coffee beans from Atlas Coffee and Lifeboost. I've been using a blade grinder but been thinking about getting a conical burr. I drink 2 20oz cups a day but will brew a full pot when i have company over. I've been spending all this money on coffee beans so naturally I would like to get the best flavor out of them.

Here's my top contenders:

Technivorm Moccamaster
Bonavita (either Connoisseur or 1900)
OXO 9 Cup Brew
Breville Precision

I'm having a hard time spending over 300 for a coffee maker but if its worth it...

Thanks alot guys!! I look forward to your opinions!! I'll value your positive or negative feedback just the same. I'm sure there are other posts like this in the past but I wanted to start a new one :)
Hey Guys!

What is the best
available coffee maker with a thermal carafe nowadays?

I'm using a Canadian brand Oster Coffee maker which is exactly the same product as the Mr. Coffee brand which I believe is sold in the US. I have been using it now foe several years, and I have had a replacement one since last Winter. I recently noticed a strong plastic smell from the water container and I strongly suspect that it contains BPA. I want to discard the product for my health sake and I'm looking for a dependable replacement that makes good tasting coffee. I like dark roasted coffee as is, black without any sweetener.

I have been looking on the web through Google and I got several different recommendations as we usually find when we do such research. Two brands that frequently come out in the several lists of recommendations are ZOJIRUSHI and NINJA. I know that Zojirushi mentions that their water container is free of BPA, but I'm not so sure about the Ninja product. Of course, reliability is also important.

So, would any of you, coffee lovers, have a recommendation for a reliable product that makes good tasting coffee? Your comments would be appreciated.
 
I am not anti drip coffee machines. They are optimized for those who aren't into coffee and if you are not into coffee (which is fine, everybody isn't into everything) well it doesn't matter much what drip machine you get. Get the shiny one.

If you are into coffee, it further doesn't matter what machine you get, because they are not made for you. But you can get an amazing cup of coffee out of one, despite its design. The most important feature is that the shower head is good at dispersing the water throughout the top of the grounds. All other features are down the list, IMO. So other than a good shower head, get the shiny one.

Get great coffee, grind it right, and get the ratio right between coffee and water, and everything else is of secondary importance. A digital scale (very inexpensive) is the best approach.

Do not use volume measure (teaspoon or scoop for example, as ten individual teaspoons of grounds will yield ten different amounts of coffee). Measure the grams of coffee. Hey you can measure the grams of whole beans, and then grind them, it is the same amount.

Do not use the graduations marked on the coffee machines reservoir or carafe. They are wrong and meaningless. Use your digital scale to get the right amount of water.

If you are going to buy good coffee, and if you get a good grinder, and if you measure the ratio accurately, you will make good/great coffee with your machine. Even the shiny one.
 
Here is the deal. If you are not going to get a digital scale and measure your beans and your water, you will not get consistently great coffee. Regardless of the drip machine you use.

You may get a great cup, but it will be by accident and not repeatable.

If this matters to you, then see my previous post. If this doesn't matter to you, get the shiny one.
 
I am not anti drip coffee machines. They are optimized for those who aren't into coffee and if you are not into coffee (which is fine, everybody isn't into everything) well it doesn't matter much what drip machine you get. Get the shiny one.

If you are into coffee, it further doesn't matter what machine you get, because they are not made for you. But you can get an amazing cup of coffee out of one, despite its design. The most important feature is that the shower head is good at dispersing the water throughout the top of the grounds. All other features are down the list, IMO. So other than a good shower head, get the shiny one.

Get great coffee, grind it right, and get the ratio right between coffee and water, and Staples Advantage is everything else of secondary importance. A digital scale (very inexpensive) is the best approach.

Do not use volume measure (teaspoon or scoop for example, as ten individual teaspoons of grounds will yield ten different amounts of coffee). Measure the grams of coffee. Hey you can measure the grams of whole beans, and then grind them, it is the same amount.

Do not use the graduations marked on the coffee machines reservoir or carafe. They are wrong and meaningless. Use your digital scale to get the right amount of water.

If you are going to buy good coffee, and if you get a good grinder, and if you measure the ratio accurately, you will make good/great coffee with your machine. Even the shiny one.
thank you so much for your suggestion
 
Hey guys,

I've been becoming very frustrated trying to decide on which premium drip coffee maker to replace my Mr Coffee with. Reading all the reviews on amazon and google, it seems like every popular machine either doesn't last long enough, are made with cheap parts, produces a funny taste, leaks, or doesn't keep the coffee hot enough. I figured I would give it a shot in the forums. I've been purchasing coffee beans from Atlas Coffee and Lifeboost. I've been using a blade grinder but been thinking about getting a conical burr. I drink 2 20oz cups a day but will brew a full pot when i have company over. I've been spending all this money on coffee beans so naturally I would like to get the best flavor out of them.

Here's my top contenders:

Technivorm Moccamaster
Bonavita (either Connoisseur or 1900)
OXO 9 Cup Brew
Breville Precision

I'm having a hard time spending over 300 for a coffee maker but if its worth it...

Thanks alot guys!! I look forward to your opinions!! I'll value your positive or negative feedback just the same. I'm sure there are other posts like this in the past but I wanted to start a new one :)
The Mocamaster does look nice.
Also the Chemex Ottomatic 2.0, Fellow Adien, Brim Pour Over, Gevi BrewOne, XBloom Original are very nice high-quality machines, amongst others.
 
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I am not anti drip coffee machines. They are optimized for those who aren't into coffee and if you are not into coffee (which is fine, everybody isn't into everything) well it doesn't matter much what drip machine you get. Get the shiny one.

If you are into coffee, it further doesn't matter what machine you get, because they are not made for you. But you can get an amazing cup of coffee out of one, despite its design. The most important feature is that the shower head is good at dispersing the water throughout the top of the grounds. All other features are down the list, IMO. So other than a good shower head, get the shiny one.

Get great coffee, grind it right, and get the ratio right between coffee and water, and everything else is of secondary importance. A digital scale (very inexpensive) is the best approach.

Do not use volume measure (teaspoon or scoop for example, as ten individual teaspoons of grounds will yield ten different amounts of coffee). Measure the grams of coffee. Hey you can measure the grams of whole beans, and then grind them, it is the same amount.

Do not use the graduations marked on the coffee machines reservoir or carafe. They are wrong and meaningless. Use your digital scale to get the right amount of water.

If you are going to buy good coffee, and if you get a good grinder, and if you measure the ratio accurately, you will make good/great coffee with your machine. Even the shiny one.
Yeah... people that drink coffee from drip machines aren't "into" coffee.
You might want to brush up a bit on SCAA and ECBC standards. The coffee maker and it's ability to brew at a specific temperature range is critical.
You don't know what you don't know about coffee.
 
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