☕ Brew it your way, every day! 🌟
The FellowStagg [XF] Pour-Over Coffee Maker Set is a premium brewing kit that includes a Stagg [XF] Pour-Over Dripper, a stylish Stagg Double Wall Glass Carafe, and 30 specially designed paper filters. This set is perfect for coffee enthusiasts who appreciate a bright, clean cup without the hassle, featuring a built-in ratio aid for precise brewing and a versatile design suitable for various beverages.
Exterior Finish | Matte |
Material | Borosilicate Glass Silicone Stainless Steel |
Item Weight | 15.84 ounces |
Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
Number of Items | 1 |
Item Dimensions D x W x H | 5.51"D x 12.01"W x 5.51"H |
Capacity | 700 Milliliters |
Style | Modern |
Color | Matte black |
Recommended Uses For Product | Cold Brew, Brewing Coffee, Steeping Tea, Mixing Cocktails & Elixirs |
Operation Mode | Manual |
Human Interface Input | Buttons |
Filter Type | Paper |
Specific Uses For Product | brewing coffee |
Special Features | Water Filter |
Coffee Maker Type | Drip Coffee Machine |
1**6
Who Needs a V60?
This dripper is next level. This thing provides the perfect level of saturation for the perfect cup of coffee. Yes, it's pricey, but well worth the money. This will leave your V60 in the dust.
A**A
Very good no-plastic coffee maker
Why I chose this coffee brewer?I've been trying to get away from my AeroPress which made pretty good coffee but is made of plastic. Plastic (even if it's non-BPA) leaches into the boiling hot water that is needed to make good coffee and it makes me feel unhealthy (though more research may be needed to support my "feeling"). I looked at various options but most of them either had some plastic contact (often with boiling hot water) or had other issues. Moka Express, for example, required heavy pre-cleaning to remove white residue that builds up either due to Aluminum construction or mold during storage.French press is great but it requires patience if you want to drink silt-free coffee. And, I like coffee that has been paper-filtered to remove the oils. So, I just about settled for pour over coffee and was about to buy a Chemex glass carafe until I discovered the Fellow Stagg pour-over brewer. I liked that Fellow Stagg XF claimed to be less tedious than a traditional, conical pour-over design. And, the Fellow Stagg dripper was metal instead of plastic.Brewing experience & cleanupI was pleasantly surprised that the construction quality was top notch. Everything from the ratio aid to the glass jug fits nicely with each other. The cleanup was fast too. The coffee filter stores all the wet, used coffee grinds so you can simply pick it up and throw it in the trash. The coffee filter paper is strong enough to support the wet coffee grinds without breaking and it usually doesn't drip when you're moving it from the dripper to the trash bin. The jug can handle hot coffee nicely. The outside of the jug does get warm but I was able to hold it without oven mitts and pour the brewed coffee into a cup. The glass jug cleans up nicely too even after you let it sit for a while. The metal components just need a rinse if you don't let them sit.The storage is nice and compact because the ratio aid and funnel attach into the dripper and you can put plastic wrapped paper filters into the dripper.Pro tip: buy a gooseneck, fast-boiling kettle that has a temperature gauge. Once you use it, you'll love the precision and it'll make for better coffee every time.Coffee qualityThe coffee I made was very good and nearly perfect. I like hot drip coffee and this made the best one I've made for myself beating my AeroPress.Some issues1. The glass jug is deceptively huge! While the measurement says 20oz, the jug can actually hold much more than that. 20oz is near the middle of the jug. The measurements differ wildly for different coffee brewers. In comparison to some other coffee brewers (such as MokaExpress or French press), when Fellow says 20oz, it means way more than 20oz. In hindsight, I should've bought the smaller (10oz version) because I was looking to brew only one cup of coffee at a time.2. The brewed coffee does not stay hot for long. Even though the glass jug comes with a Silicone gasket, it doesn't keep the coffee hot for more than 5 mins. I recommend brewing just enough so you don't have any left in the glass jug to get cold.3. The outer surface of the dripper and ratio aid has an annoying texture. This is obviously a minor nitpicking point. The pictures and videos online appear to show a smooth shiny surface which would be pleasant to hold but not so. The outer surface is rough and weird as if someone designed it to be unpleasant, texturally speaking.4. I expect that the double-wall glass jug, by the nature of it's construction, is going weak on the inside. This means exposing the insides to quick temperature differences or dropping a heavy ice cube would probably break it quick. This is something to be careful about.Overall, I think this is a decent investment in coffee if you like good drip/pour-over coffee that is not a hassle to make or clean up after. And, the best part is the lack of plastic touching boiling water.
J**H
Makes amazing coffee.
Personally, I love this coffee dripper. In studying the book "The Physics of Filter Coffee" by Jonathan Gagne, I found that this dripper offered me the greatest benefits out of all the others. The glass itself is really nice, sleek and double walled. It doesn't feel cheep at all and is very premium. The entire kits works very well. The maximum brew I think you could get is 12oz and that would be the absolute limit. I brew 23g of coffee at a 1:15 brew ratio with a net result slightly below 12 oz. The will fill the glass caraf fully. I usually use the Fellow move mug (which is awesome by iteself) with this dripper so I rarely need to use the glass caraf. Even with the double walled glass, I do feel the glass gets a bit warm for my preferance when totally full. Overall, the dripper makes great coffee and has a solid build.The ONLY downside, are the filters. They are expensive and statistically, the filters are actually thinner than many other filters.
K**R
Good news: GREAT coffee. Slightly less good news: slippery when wet
Let's start with the bright side. I'll detail my one gripe about the product down below.I've been doing pour-over at home for 5 years now. I know real coffee experts, and would never call myself one. But I do pay attention and I'm always interested in evolving my game.I've had a Fellow electric kettle for years, and been using their vacuum-sealed Atmos canisters for both beans and tea. They're quite expensive — a bit too much so, even — but they're first-class products. I've also had a Bodum burr grinder for the same time period. (FOLKS: if you want to up your coffee game, GET A BURR GRINDER before you pony up for expensive beans and other equipment.!!! Changes EVERYTHING.)I'd had my eye on this Stagg pour-over kit for some time. Been using Hario for a long time (glass dripper and carafe). I was never UNhappy with them. My only question: a tendency to some stomach acidity after my morning cup. I'd experimented broadly with beans and grind, and nothing seemed to help.I was put off, honestly, by the Fellow price tags: both $99 for the set, then filters which are easily 2x the price of Hario's. Could it possibly be worth that much investment, when I already own really good equipment?I finally decided to take the chance when Amazon had the set on sale, and (as much as I truly do not like abusing Amazon's generous return policy) figured I could always send it back in a pinch.So? Worth it? In a nutshell: YES. Using the same beans and grind, my coffee was immediately smoother, richer, and more resonant — that wonderful echoing aftertaste in your mouth and throat which the serious Chinese tea world knows as hui gan — and.... most importantly.... ZERO STOMACH ACIDITY.Nothing short of revolutionary for me. I'm so glad I followed my hunch.Now. The small downside is this: the glass carafe is obviously quite smooth. I started noticing that, as I picked it up to carry into the living room and pour, my grip was tenuous. My hand would start slipping upwards, especially if it was at all damp (kinda inevitable when brewing coffee). I could see the disaster in the making: one day I'd get distracted by something, and CRASH....I got lucky: I happened to have a large 1" wide rubber strip which just fit over the lip at the top. So now I have something more secure to grip. Problem solved. But I'd say it's something to watch out for.Overall, again: the set is AWESOME, and I couldn't be happier with my daily coffee.
Trustpilot
4 days ago
2 months ago