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Grinds Left in Grinder: To maximize freshness, the Encore minimizes the ground coffee left in the grinder. Brewing Methods: The Encore is a great grinder for manual brewing and espresso. Motor: A powerful, high torque DC motor effortlessly drives the burrs. This motor turns slowly resulting in cool, quiet operation and permits long grinding duty-cycles. The circuitry is equipped with an automatically resetting, thermal cutoff switch. Calibration: An innovative burr calibration system ensures that each grinder has the full range of grind. If necessary, the grinders can be user calibrated. Speed Control: With unique speed control, the Encore uses a combination of gear and electronic speed reduction to control the rotation of the burr to 450 RPM. The electronic speed controller is adjustable from 405 to 495 RPM in the event that specific user conditions require modification of the speed. This slow speed reduces heat, noise, and static generation in the grinder. It also ensures that the beans feed smoothly into the burrs. On-off Switch: The Encore has an easy on-off switch. Cleaning: Burrs are easily removable with no tools, making cleaning very easy. Accessories (which may be purchased separately): Esatto: An accessory that transforms your Encore into a grind by weight grinder. Set the weight you want, the Esatto does the rest, weighing the ground coffee to within +/- 0.2g, while grinding, and stopping automatically. Hopper extender: An extension that can add 9 oz. of capacity to the existing 8 oz. bean hopper. Several extenders can be added to get to the capacity you need.
E**E
Solid, Clean Excellent Burr Grinder for the serious coffee enthusiast
This is an excellent coffee grinder for anyone wanting a solid conical burr grinder capable of grinding from fine to coarse coffee, in full pot quantities. Please note that one of the more popular competitive grinders (Bodum Bistro Electric Burr Grinder) limits you to grinding for 20 seconds, then waiting for 2 minutes before grinding more. It takes almost 1 minute for us to grind 2 oz of beans for a 10 cup drip pot, so 20 seconds is out of the question for us.Note also that the grinder I replaced was a Cuisinart® Burr Mill Grinder. This grinder worked fine for almost 10 years, but I burned out the motor grinding two pounds of coffee without a break. Beware! Any home coffee grinder is not designed for this kind of heavy duty work! while it worked, however, it had presents from 4 to 18 cups, which determined the time it ground. This made it easy, and you could vary the grind fineness separately, but didn't allow for fine tuning the quantity, especially for one cup of espresso.There are no preset quantities built into the Encore Baratza grinder, and there is no timer. It's either on or off. With the set in this promotional offer, there's a brush and, more importantly, a digital scale ideal for precise measurements. We weigh out the beans, pour them into the grinder, and turn it on. When all beans are ground, we stop. We have been experimenting with different grinds (there are 0-40 possible grind settings, from espresso very, very fine to very coarse) and different quantities of coffee for a 10-cup pot. With our old Cuisinart grinder, we could change the coarseness only, and the quantity was preset to 4-16 cups with an automatic timer. While this worked fairly well, we found that the amount of coffee varied by the particular beans we were using, so we like the Encore flexibility, though it takes some experimenting to get it right. Our rule of thumb: start with two ounces of beans for 10 "cups" and vary the grind and the quantity until it's "perfect."Note also that you can time how long it takes to grind the desired amount of coffee at a given grind setting, then fill the canister with beans, and use a kitchen timer to tell you when to stop grinding. It will repeat the quantity very accurately if you use the same grind time and coarseness setting.Finally, one of the greatest advantages of this Encore design is that the canister for catching the ground coffee is directly below the conical burrs. On our old Cuisinart grinder, the grinds were blown sideways by the rotating burrs, and the exit hole tended to get clogged up with grinds, particularly with finer grinds and the more oily beans we often used. In addition, the grinds tended to stick to the sides of the container, held by the force of the ejection and also come static, apparently. This means it was a chore to get all the grounds out of the container and into the filter basket. With the Encore Baratza, there's a neat pile of grinds in the container, no hole to clog, and a few gentle taps seem to clean out the container. We've made about 10 pots of coffee and haven't used the brush yet.Overall, I didn't want the presets, and am willing to experiment to find the right combination of grind and bean quantity. I don't mind mweighing each batch of beans for the time being, while we experiment. If you just want to use it in an automatic mode with less manual input, this isn't the grinder for you.
B**'
Easily add beans
Easily add beans, push button to grind exactly the amount that I want. After a couple of months checking to see if burrs need brushing, they don't acculumate much packed grounds on the surface. I have seen the warnings about "oily" beans (aka espresso) being a problem. So far, I have medium dark beans labelled as San Francisco Bay Espresso that have very little oil, but that is not the espresso I am accustomed to in the past. With more oil a light tamp works fine, but with the medium dark, it requires more pressure to keep the water from tunelling course through the grounds. I have successfully made espresso for decades in a cheap system and now cannot get a cup to save my life. Without all the oil, the tamping becomes critical and the heat of my introductory level machine is not something that can be altered. I am going to have to get preground espresso in order to save my Baratza from being damaged. I once had a hand grinder that I daily clogged with grindings, and quickly " bit the dust" from oily beans so I have a healthy fear of these warnings. Such a shame, caramel espresso is what I was dreaming of.... maybe more practice and trials. I do really enjoy my grinder for drip coffee. I grind just the amount I need at mid 20 setting. any finer and a silt blocks my drip maker. This is a sweet addition to my kitchen regardless. It is a solid weighty machine, I can easily move as needed.
J**.
As good as it gets at this price level
My objective was to graduate from my blade grinder and manual burr grinder to a good quality motorized conical burr grinder. After learning about and reviewing numerous units, I decided the Encore was the best value, offering the best combination of features, quality and price. It grinds a consistent product with a reasonable noise level.As a Portlander, I am a coffee enthusiast. (I'd say connoisseur, except it's kind of pretentious.) The Encore provides a certain satisfaction from crafting my cup, beginning with careful and precise grinding of the essence of the beverage--the coffee beans.I don't see any reason to spend hundreds more for a household-use grinder. Yeah, some users complain about the messy flecks that sprinkle on the counter. Some don't like the noise. Hey, we're grinding coffee here! What do you expect? Maybe those folks should just buy a can of coffee.Finally, the only reason there are four stars instead of five is I don't give anything the maximum rating. Nothing is perfect, but the Encore is superlative in the entry-level high-quality conical burr grinder field.
C**Y
So far so good 4 Stars only because of design
I had noted another reviewer commented on the cheezy big red stcker "open" on the grinder. So NOT Great Italian design. I am sure it can come off somehow. For price I think this is on the expensive side for what it is. But so far having only been using this for one week. It has been doing what it is supposed to be doing, and that is grinding coffee beans well. I have no complaint in that department. I would rather have a lower price than a scale and extra brush to clean the machine - both extraneous but included with the purchase, and will never be used. The device already comes with a small cleaning brush. So I do not know what the distributor is trying to do, but my suggestion is to get rid of that red sticker, skip the extras, lower the price accordingly, and you will have a best seller. That is all said with the hope the coffee grinder will work well for a long time.
Trustpilot
1 week ago
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