2024 the best french press coffee maker review
Price: $49.95
(as of Nov 10, 2024 14:48:08 UTC - Details)
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Product Description
The Minimalist’s Dream
The P5 is your most reliable advocate for transforming your daily coffee routine into a modern, exceptional brewing experience.
Bring The Café Home
Fill the press for friends or just brew a single mug. No matter your coffee ritual, your home will become your favorite place to get coffee.
A Perfect Cup in Four Minutes
Mix coffee and hot water, wait for four minutes, then press. Keep the coffee stored in the press without it getting extra bitter over time.
A Frame for Every Kitchen
Designed with two frames to choose from: polished stainless steel or copper. An idyllic fit for kitchens of all aesthetics.
Brew Your Best Cup
We created a press that keeps sludge and grit out of your coffee, hot for hours, and free of unwanted bitterness. Welcome to Coffee 2.0.
Specifications
- Hand-Wash
- Stainless Steel
- Glass
Modernize Your Classic Coffee - The ESPRO Press P5’s minimal glass design makes it easy to brew cafe-worthy coffee you’ll love; Perfect for home, office, and travel, this coffee maker is designed to elevate your coffee experience.
Grit and Sludge-Free Coffee - The patented double micro-filter keeps your cup of coffee free of grit and sludge, ensuring every sip is smooth and delicious; No more unwanted coffee grounds in your cup!
No More Bitterness - With the ESPRO P5, pressing the filter stops extraction completely, preventing your coffee from getting bitter over time; Every cup tastes as good as the first.
Durability Meets Design - The 40% thicker German-engineered Schott-Duran glass is secured in place by a Safety Lock and has increased durability and heat retention; It's BPA, BPS, and phthalate free too!
A Timeless Classic - The minimal and elegant design of the ESPRO Press P5 makes it a stylish addition to any coffee lover's collection; Perfect for gifting to friends and family who appreciate a perfect cup of coffee
Reviewer: James E.
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Brews incredible coffee!
Review: Let me start by saying I'm a coffee geek/aficionado/snob. I roast my own coffee and have more ways to brew coffee than most, if not all coffee shops, including a semi-commercial espresso machine and a dedicated grinder.Now that you realize how serious I am about coffee, you can better appreciate my review of the Espro 3. I had been looking for a French press for a while, and eventually found this one. I was intrigued and ordered it, despite it being a little pricier than some I had been considering.Right out of the box, I could tell it was high quality and well made. I immediately looked forward to using it. And once I did, I was glad I spent the extra money, and have never looked back. The Espro 3 brews some of the best coffee I have ever had. One of my favorite ways to brew coffee is the pour-over method, due to the clarity, cleaness, and how the origin flavors come through. Another is the French press. The Espro 3 gives you the best of both. Coffee brewed in it is clean, crisp, and bright - origin flavors shine, and has many of the characteristics of coffee brewed in a pour-over. I was amazed at how incredible coffee brewed in it is! In fact, my other (approximately 14) brewers of all types have sat on the shelf collecting dust since my Espro 3 arrived. It's literally the only brewer I've used since!
Reviewer: Anen Cephalic
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: A better than average French press
Review: My espresso machine died after a decade and I decided to try a French press again. I ordered the P3, whole beans and a Haribo ceramic burr hand grinder. The overall improvement in coffee flavor and enjoyment have been remarkable. It took a few days to find the right beans, grind fineness, amount of coffee and brew time to satisfy my taste, but it was worth the effort. Now, I consistently use 25 grams of a single source Ethiopian dark roast, a finer than recommended grind (I like a strong flavor), fill my 32 oz P3 to the âminâ mark and brew for 4 minutes. I actually get up earlier in the morning, eager to have my first cup.Of course, itâs mostly the coffee and brew recipe that determines the taste, but the press plays a roll too. Iâve had Bodums and other brands and they all allowed sludge to get through and end up at the bottom of my cup. Eventually the rather coarse metal screens will deform at the edges and allow larger grounds to pass to the top side. That doesnât happen with the P3. There are two silicone wipers that seal tightly to the glass and force all the liquid to go through the screens. The first screen filters out all but the smallest coffee particles while the second screen blocks those. Itâs nice to have sludge-free coffee.To those reviewers who say their coffee was too weak, you have complete control of strength. Add more coffee, or use a finer grind, or brew longer, or use a darker roast. Use a kitchen scale rather than a spoon to measure if you want day-to-day consistency. A spoonful of a finer grind weighs more than a coarser grind. Weight is more accurate than volume for predicting strength.For those who say the plunger requires a lot of force to depress, use a coarser grind. If there are lots of fine particles, those will clog the screen and slow down the plunger. Maybe get a burr grinder. Burrs produce more consistent particle sizes. The spinny metal bladed spice grinders create every size particle from large chunks to fine powder. Those fine ones will clog the filter baskets for sure. Most grocery store grinders are burr machines and do a better job than the spice grinders. I recommend being patient and pushing the plunger down very slowly, like over 30 seconds. Pushing quickly causes churn which stirs up the grounds and causes even more clogging. Pushing really hard can force grounds to bypass the filters and push past the seals.For those who say itâs hard to clean, I find it is as easy/hard as any other French press. I pour the grounds through a fine mesh sieve and tap it into my compost pail. A once over with a soapy sponge removes the coffee oils from the glass. The screens usually just need a rinse. Although I prefer to hand wash, the instructions say that all parts can go on the top rack of the dishwasher. If this is too much trouble, you might want a Keurig.For those who say it wastes a lot of coffee, Iâve measured what remains after youâve poured your last cup. On my 32 ounce P3, once the grounds were removed, there were 5 fluid ounces of very sludgy liquid trapped below the screens. I wouldnât want to drink it so I donât think of it as waste. But if this is important to you, you might consider a pour-over brewer instead where nearly every drop ends up in your cup.For those that say itâs cheaply made, it is their least expensive entry-level model. I find it robust enough to use every day. If you want something sturdier, they have other models with borosilicate glass (this model has plain glass) and metal frames.I chose the Espro French press based on a recommendation from the New York Times product reviewing site Wirecutter. I chose a French press over other types of brewers based on the YouTube videos of coffee expert James Hoffmann. I recommend both sources.
Reviewer: l. j. garcia
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Great French press! Perfect brew.
Review: Love the 32oz size. Get almost two full 16oz travel mugs from one brew!The taste is smooth, across the board with all roasts. I always do a dark roast, and over brewing leaves a bitter aftertaste. Not so with the P3 Espro. Grit is non-issue. Materials are quality. I opted for the P3, plastic cage, and it feels solid/stable/secure.Two minor flaws, not a dealbreaker b/ the coffee is so good, but if I had ability to influence design/engineering:1. Adjust plunger mechanism to get as much coffee from full brew. Sad to leave any amount trapped behind the filters. And the manual work around to raise plunger, tilt and re-press is clumsy. And there is a fair amount of coffee left behind the dual filter.2. Safety lock is great. Would be better if it stopped in place where the pour spout lines up with handle. So itâs a straight pour that way.Ok 3 things: would be extra nice to have measurements marked on glass (e.g. 8oz, 16,oz, 24oz, 32oz)Highly recommend!
Reviewer: Shotgun
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: As described
Review: This French Press works exactly as advertised. The directions are well written and easy to understand which should be worth a star by itself. I'm quite sure that there are a number of other presses that work as well, but when you add in the relatively low price this gets 5 stars easily. It is easy enough to clean (dishwasher safe) and use. While I'll certainly use my K-cup based machine more often for convenience sake, this thing does make a really good cup of coffee.Note: I do not accept payment of any kind to post false reviews. If I am asked to (as I have been in the past) I will notify Amazon and post a review that indicates the effort.
Reviewer: Guendanadxi
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Lo dicho una prensa francesa de gran calidad a un precio accesible, altamente recomendable
Reviewer: Francie Bañuelos
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Me encanta el diseño, es muy fácil de desarmar para limpiar y aguanta hasta 3 tazas de café
Reviewer: Marcia Regina
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Produto cumpre com o descrito, e não permite resÃduos, por conta de ter 2 filtros, deixando um café limpo com extração completa dos grãos
Reviewer: O. G.
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Tolle Kanne, der Kaffeesatz bleibt in der Kanne und kommt nicht in die Tasse.
Reviewer: coulm
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: thé ou café toujours parfaite
Customers say
Customers like the coffee quality, filter quality, and ease of use of the coffee maker. They mention it makes delicious coffee with few particles and the double filter system is brilliant. Some appreciate that it works well. However, some customers disagree on the ease of cleaning, build quality, design, and value for money.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews