zoundman
Esta tetera es de muy buena calidad. Es más cara que otras opciones pero vale la pena.Otras opciones más económicas a veces gotean de algunas partes. Con esta no me ha sucedido.El display LCD de temperatura es muy conveniente sobretodo para poder tener la temperatura exacta del café o té.Trae un botón de Hold por si calientas agua para más tazas y cuando te vuelvas a servir, está a la temperatura correcta. Sí cambia el sabor del café dependiendo de la temperatura. Lo ideal es entre 90 y 96 grados.Yo la he estado usando a 92 con buenos resultados.
Hanyatte
並行輸入のため説明書は英語ですが、使っていれば分かります。カフェで使ってる店もよく見かけるだけあって使いやすい。カバーも付属されてます。1℃単位で調整できるのが嬉しい。温度計を入れる手間もないので楽チンです!brewistaもいいですが、値段からしたらこれで十分。イベント出店に向けて今後も買い足す予定。
みちみち
プロご用達ということでコーヒードリップ用に購入してみました。まずは、見た目に関しては高級感もあり海外メーカーらしいごつさもあるので、海外っぽさが好きな方やプロっぽい感じが好きな方はオススメなデザインです。私はごついの大好きです。次に温度調整ですが基本動作を覚えればコーヒーは90度、お茶は80度と変更するのも簡単ですし、毎回同じ温度なら前回の温度を覚えているので、より便利です。ただプリセットされている温度が自分の使う温度と違うので変更できれば最高でした(もしかして変更できるのかもしれませんが)。あと個体差があるかもしれませんが少量だと温度コントロールが怪しいです。更に90度設定にすると80度ぐらいからカチカチ音がします(物凄く小さいですが)。両方とも個体差のような気もしますが、使用上問題がないので無視しています。あと湧き上がるまでの時間は同じ量でも日本のケトルより遅いと思いますし、沸き上がったときに音がないので気づかない事が多々あります。次はドリップ時の重さ、持ちやすさですが、これに関しては多少重いですが、グリップの形と全体の重量バランスからとても使いやすいです。お湯の出る感じも非常になめらかで、ドリップがとてもやりやすいです。重さも含め絶妙な重量バランスをしているので、プロやカフェの現場で使われる理由が使ってみて納得できました。総合的な評価は上記にも書きましたが、個体差なのか少量時の温度コントロールや80度以上でのカチカチ音が気になる以外はさすがの商品です。購入は並行輸入を選択したので1万円以下で買えたので価格以上に納得できました。並行輸入のリスクを考えても倍払って正規品を買う理由は無いと思います。唯一コンセントがアメリカ仕様でアースの棒が付いているので変換器はいりますが、安く色々なところで売っているので問題ありません。コーヒーをドリップしている方なら一度使った方が良いと思います。重さがネックになる方もいるとは思いますが、良い道具を使う楽しみを味わえる一品です。
Pipe LLanos Reyes
De muy buena calidad y fácil de usar y manipular, no hay forma de que te quemes (si lo usas correctamente). Si hace la diferencia al preparar el café y ayuda el poder programar y mantener la temperatura deseada.
Mark Feblowitz
This is an excellent little kettle. It's the first we've purchased that precisely controls the water temperature. Who knew that coffee brewed at 200ºF would taste better than coffee brewed at 212ºF? And and the reverse for tea.It's a small kettle (1 liter) with a small spout - both take a little getting used to. It's also slightly slower than our prior electric kettles (and all seem to be slower in the US, with 110v versus the UK with 220v - maybe that's why they use 220??). The small spout is much more precise, and I haven't yet gotten the steam burns I used to, when I'd forget and reach past the spout. An unexpected benefit.Once you get used to filling it to the top for two 12-oz cups, all is good.One can see how the design engineers optimized the controls and minimized the overall number of controls. It's a bit geeky, but so is the kettle itself. One thing is that the operational modes depend on whether the kettle is sitting on the base or not. When you lift the kettle off, you can set the "count-up" timer to time, e.g., how long your tea has steeped. Forget and put the kettle on its perch and the timer stops. And when you remove the kettle, the "temperature hold" capability goes off and has to be re-engaged when the kettle is re-seated.One can manually set a target temperature, and separately press a button to say whether to hold the target temperature once it's reached. Holding it should probably be the default (it's held for, I believe, 7 minutes), but it probably defaults to not holding, for energy and safety reasons.The kettle has a set of factory preset temperatures. So you can pick among the presets and not have to use the + or - buttons that you use to manually set the temperature. One trouble: the temperatures we use (200º for coffee, 212º for certain black teas) are not in the set of presets(!). Another trouble is, you can't set your own presets. Bonavita provide an instruction booklet with recommended target temperatures. If coffee and black tea are the most commonly consumed, why aren't those temperatures included in the presets?The kettle does remember the last temperature you manually set, so you don't have to forage through the presets. If you're single or every user in the household drinks the same type of beverage, you're all set. But the kettle only remembers one temperature and forgets that when you set another or search through the presets, so a family of coffee *and* tea drinkers will end up having to use the + and - keys to set preferred temperatures.If I'd change anything on this kettle, it would be to be able to save a preferred target temperature, perhaps by remembering the last 5 set, or in the same way one saves a preferred radio station on a push-button radio (e.g., press and hold, until a beep or flash acknowledges the save). Likely the best approach, considering the limited smarts of the circuitry and people's limited set of preferences, would be to have the personal preference bump some factory preset - maybe limited to 5 presets).All of that said, I really like this kettle and would buy another one when needed.
EveEve
I bought this back in 2019. Not a single issue with it and works beautifully. Can adjust any temperature, have it hold that temp for some amount of time (or turn off when it reaches it) and has some preset temps to flip through. The spout pours gracefully and it's easy to keep clean. Like any standard kettle it does just fine with boiling a vinegar mixture to break up scale.I cannot express how much I love this kettle. The only downside I would even think of is sizing if you have a big family that you consistently make 2+ more cups of tea at a time, that is where it is limited. For you and someone else though? Or just alone? It's perfect. I will take this product to my grave 10/10.
Valeen
Take it from me, people. You won't be disappointed. I love this thing. Solid construction. Great design. Super comfy handle. Efficient. Fast. Quiet.The timer is a really nice touch. I love that the lid stays on (even if you turn the thing completely upside down). The pour is beautiful and easy to control. I've been brewing some killer high-end single region coffees in my Hario V-60 with this kettle. Lovin' life.There is one teeny tiny little issue though ... it won't heat past the boiling point at higher altitudes. No joke. Hear me out.I'd been eyeballin' this kettle for a while, and finally decided to pull the trigger when I found out I'd be staying in a hotel in Tampa, Florida for a 7 day conference. If you enjoy manually brewing high-end coffee as I do, you'll sympathize with my plight. At risk of sounding snobby (Oh what the H? It's cool. I'm a coffee snob. I can admit it), there's no way I was going a week drinking Starbucks or whatever else they served at the hotel/convention center. So I ordered this bad boy and brought my grinder and brew gear with me. I was delighted with my brilliance and enjoyed tasty brews all week while the rest of the attendees suffered through.While in Florida, I daily heated the water to precisely 205°F for perfect extraction. With this kettle, it was easy peasy. Having successfully survived my stint in Tampa, I returned home to beautiful Colorado, eager to brew up some tastiness for my wife and hang out over a delicious cup. To my surprise, once home, the kettle wouldn't heat over 200°F! No joke. I set it for it's max setting (212°)... and still no go. 200°--That was it. I busted out the trusty candy thermometer to make sure that the kettle's internal thermometer was reading correctly, and sure enough, right on 200°.I suspected that the altitude was the issue (I live at a beautiful 6743 ft. above sea level), but just in case, I returned the kettle to Amazon and had them send me a new one. [Side note: Amazon's exchange policy is amazing. They sent me a new kettle right away via 1 day shipping for free. I had the new one the next day, and they gave me a couple weeks to return the old one on their dime. Well done, Amazon. Thank you.] The new kettle performed exactly like the old one, so that proved that the elevation made the difference.Of course we all know that variance in elevation, and the subsequent change in air pressure, alters the temperature at which water will boil. Water boils at 212°F at sea level, but boils at 199.2°F at my house in the high country of Colorado. This, I understand. Why this kettle can't continue heating the water past the boiling point, on the other hand, I don't understand.This kettle is rad and it boils water beautifully. But it will only go as hot as the boiling point and no further. If you live at or near sea level, then you're golden. But if you live, for instance, on the top of Pikes Peak (14,114 ft.), then you're looking at a max water temp of 186.8°F. But you've got awesome views!