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transscript test video
0:20
Welcome to today's video, which is a beginner's guide
0:23
to coffee grinders.
0:24
Because there's a lot of different coffee grinders out there
0:27
which is the right one for you?
0:28
Which one meets your needs?
0:29
Which is the best value for money?
0:31
Now, what we're gonna do today
0:33
is cover a little bit of theory at the start
0:35
on coffee grinding, right?
0:36
Understanding what's going on,
0:38
why it's something worth worrying about,
0:40
why it's something we're spending money
0:42
on a bit of equipment to do it.
0:43
And then in the second half,
0:45
we'll talk through all of these grinders here
0:48
and talk through the features that you get,
0:50
what happens when you spend more money
0:52
and you, I hope at the end of it,
0:54
will feel well-equipped
0:55
to buy a coffee grinder that meets your needs
0:57
and have even better tasting coffee every morning.
1:00
One quick thing,
1:00
I'm not gonna necessarily recommend specific models,
1:03
nor review specific models in this video.
1:06
Where I've talked about grinders before
1:08
they'll be links down in the description,
1:09
you can watch those.
1:10
I've done a number of different videos
1:12
on particular grinders.
1:13
Today, these are kind of representative grinders
1:16
of different technologies or different features
1:18
just to kind of explain what's happening
1:21
when you spend more money.
1:22
But let's start with the theory.
1:24
Let's start with what happens when we grind coffee.
1:26
Why we grind coffee in the first place.
1:28
Now our whole coffee bean is a wonderful thing,
1:30
but it doesn't make a good tasting coffee.
1:32
Water cannot get to all of the flavor
1:35
'cause it could only sort of get
1:36
to the very outside of the bean.
1:37
And so if you put whole beans in hot water
1:39
some flavor will come out, but really not very much.
1:43
And so we grind it, we smash it into little tiny pieces
1:46
because what we're concerned about first and foremost
1:48
is exposing sort of more surface area.
1:51
And the finer you grind anything,
1:52
the more surface area that you have,
1:54
and the easier it is for the water to get in there,
1:56
dissolve the flavor out, get it into your cup of coffee
1:58
and for you to have a better
1:59
more delicious cup at the end of it.
2:01
Now, one of the big sells you'll hear
2:02
for a coffee grinder is that freshness
2:05
is actually a really key aspect of grinding coffee.
2:07
And that's true, when you smash coffee,
2:09
you expose all of the surface area
2:11
and it means everything that you've exposed
2:13
can begin to go stale.
2:15
And there are three ways in which coffee goes stale.
2:17
The first and to me kind of saddest
2:19
is the idea that you just lose those flavors.
2:21
They go, what's called volatilely,
2:23
float off into the atmosphere
2:24
and those flavors and aromas essentially wander off.
2:27
You'll smell them for a minute
2:28
and then you won't get to drink them later.
2:30
So that's kind of a thing.
2:31
So the older coffee is the more flavor
2:33
essentially just loses to the air, to the atmosphere.
2:36
The second thing that happens
2:37
is that you have what are called sort of staling reactions
2:39
where different compounds combine with each other
2:41
and begin to create new flavors
2:44
that often aren't particularly nice.
2:46
And so after a little while
2:47
your coffee will taste measurably worse
2:49
as well as being less interesting.
2:51
And then the third thing is oxidation.
2:53
And that'll happen to sort of some of the fats
2:55
and oils inside coffee,
2:57
they will oxidize and essentially begin to go rancid.
3:00
It's not a great smell or taste rancid oil,
3:02
and rancid oil in all forms smells a little bit fishy
3:05
and that's true with coffee.
3:06
So very old, very stale, rancid coffee
3:09
is not something I would recommend.
3:11
And the best way to avoid all of those things
3:13
is really only to smash the coffee bean to pieces
3:16
when you want to immediately then brew it,
3:18
that way you capture a lot more flavor,
3:20
you have less loss of quality,
3:22
it's just a better time all around.
3:24
Now occasionally on the internet
3:25
you'll see a thing that says pre-ground coffee
3:27
from a very, very, very good commercial grinder
3:30
will make better coffee in many cases,
3:32
than fresh ground coffee
3:33
from a very cheap coffee grinder.
3:35
And that's an interesting test and study that was done.
3:38
I think it ignores some of the other reasons
3:41
to buy a coffee grinder.
3:42
We'll get to in a second,
3:43
but really what isn't to be underestimated
3:46
is just the pleasure of grinding coffee.
3:48
In that moment, there is an enormous release
3:50
of smell that is fantastic.
3:52
That moment of grinding coffee
3:54
bit in the morning, first thing, or in the afternoon
3:57
it's a pleasure not to be missed.
3:58
So from that perspective alone,
4:00
a coffee grinder is worth having.
4:02
And if you own a pepper grinder of any kind,
4:04
then you owe it to yourself to own a coffee grinder too,
4:07
if you drink coffee.
4:08
Now, the second thing that gets talked about a lot
4:10
is called grind uniformity.
4:12
And that's the idea that when you grind coffee,
4:14
ideally, the little pieces that you make
4:16
should all be the same size.
4:17
Because when you come to prepare them later,
4:20
brew them into a cup of coffee,
4:21
the more uniform the size is, the better
4:23
they'll give up their flavor in a more uniform way.
4:26
And that makes sense from anything in the kitchen
4:28
if you're trying to cook some potatoes,
4:30
if you cook a little tiny piece of potato
4:32
and a whole potato, they'll cook at very different rates
4:34
and they probably won't cook well together.
4:36
Same thing with coffee grinding, right?
4:38
If you are trying to brew loads of little tiny pieces
4:40
of coffee, alongside loads of very big pieces of coffee,
4:44
you'll get a lot of flavor out of the tiny pieces
4:46
and not very much out of the other pieces.
4:48
And this can result in a very unbalanced,
4:50
unpleasant cup of coffee.
4:52
Those tiny pieces can add some bitterness,
4:54
those giant pieces can add some sourness,
4:57
and those two things combined
4:59
are not how I wanna start my day.
5:00
So as we talk through grinders
5:01
you'll hear me reference this idea of grind uniformity.
5:04
And it is important,
5:06
it helps you make better tasting coffee
5:08
to have the pieces be a very similar size.
5:10
You'll have less unbalanced, less unpleasant cups of coffee,
5:14
more delicious cups of coffee.
5:15
Now the third aspect of coffee grinders
5:17
that's very important of coffee grinding
5:19
that's very important is grind size control.
5:21
The ideal grind size for espresso
5:23
is very different from the ideal grind size
5:25
for something like a French press, for example, right?
5:27
With espresso, you want lots and lots
5:29
of very fine small pieces
5:31
because you're gonna extract that coffee
5:33
with very little liquid to make it very strong.
5:35
With a French press, you might wanna grind it
5:37
a little bit coarser.
5:38
So being able to control the grind size
5:40
is really, really, really important,
5:42
particularly so in espresso,
5:44
but we'll touch on that a little bit later.
5:46
So that's it, that's the key information
5:48
to think about as we go into looking
5:49
at these different grinders,
5:51
it'll help us to understand
5:52
why you might wanna spend a bit more money here or there.
5:54
But before we get into that, there's a quick ad
5:56
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5:59
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6:41
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6:43
So let's start with these 10 grinders in front of me.
6:45
Let's start at the beginning
6:46
with the cheapest grinder on offer,
6:48
which is this it's a blade grinder.
6:50
And these can be had for like 20 pounds,
6:51
they're very cheap, they're very simple things.
6:53
You've got a little motor
6:55
and that's attached to some spinning blades inside here.
6:58
And when you turn the grinder on
6:59
they spin really, really quickly
7:00
and essentially those blades, they're not really sharp
7:03
they kind of just smash the coffee down into little pieces.
7:06
The longer you run it, the finer the coffee will be.
7:08
But the problem with these,
7:10
is that you really don't have any control
7:14
meaningfully over grind size.
7:15
To have really the same grind size
7:17
every time is quite tricky,
7:18
and to have a uniform grind size is extremely unlikely.
7:21
This kind of act of violence
7:23
of just smashing the coffee beans instead of cutting them
7:26
creates a lot of very fine pieces
7:27
that can add a lot of muddiness and bitterness
7:29
and kind of dullness to your cup of coffee in the morning.
7:33
I'm not saying you can't enjoy coffee
7:34
made with a blade grinder,
7:35
and there's some hacks you can do too
7:37
to improve the quality of its output
7:39
that's linked up here.
7:40
If you're enjoying coffee with a blade grinder now,
7:42
you could really, really be enjoying your coffee
7:44
a lot more with a better grinder
7:47
that offers you a little bit more control and uniformity.
7:49
If you own one of these and you're upgrading from it,
7:51
do not throw it away
7:52
they make for fantastic spice grinders,
7:55
they are useful to have around.
7:56
But to grind coffee
7:58
they are a little bit frustrating.
7:59
So then we move from what are called blade grinders
8:02
into the rest of these, which are called burr grinders.
8:04
So inside these, you've got two cutting discs,
8:07
one spins against the other
8:09
and controlling the distance between the two
8:11
controls how big the pieces are when they finally get out
8:13
of the grinder into the collection bin below
8:16
where you're gonna sort of take them
8:17
and then pour them into your brewery
8:18
or whatever you're gonna do with them.
8:19
This is a classic kind of entry-level hand grinder.
8:22
It's relatively cheap, it's about 40 pounds.
8:25
And a lot of people choose to start
8:26
their sort of grinding journey
8:28
here with one of these 'cause it's not a huge investment.
8:31
And that's true, you'll have some control
8:32
of the grind setting.
8:33
In something like this,
8:34
you kind of control the burr distance.
8:35
This is a conical burr grinder.
8:37
So you've got a kind of cone-shaped main burr
8:39
that spins inside this thing.
8:40
Conical burrs are popular and a lot of grinders
8:43
they have a larger cutting surface
8:45
which helps you to kind of grind more coffee
8:47
through kind of per turn, which is useful.
8:49
This is in contrast to what are called flat burr grinders.
8:52
We have two discs or rings of cutting teeth,
8:55
one spins against the other, same control mechanism
8:57
you just move them further apart
8:58
for a coarser grind or closer together for a finer grind.
9:00
Now the burrs and cheaper hand grinders especially
9:03
tend to be made of ceramic.
9:04
This is a cheaper material to produce.
9:07
They don't cut quite as cleanly.
9:08
So your grind uniformity isn't quite as good
9:11
as a metal burr,
9:12
but as an entry-level thing, they work okay.
9:15
What you tend to see also in cheaper burr grinders
9:18
is a little bit of wobbling
9:19
from that bottom burrs that's grinding.
9:20
'Cause it's not stabilized super well
9:22
because they're trying to keep costs down.
9:24
That will also result in a less uniform cup of coffee.
9:27
So if you look at going from say 40 pounds
9:29
up to 100 pounds, right?
9:33
You've got the same basic technology.
9:34
You're gonna be doing the work here.
9:35
You are turning, you're working to crush the coffee
9:39
between those burrs.
9:40
Now, here you go from a plastic construction
9:42
to a metal construction,
9:43
and you go from ceramic burrs to metal burrs.
9:46
So it's a big jump in quality
9:47
going from 40 pounds to say 100 pounds.
9:49
Now with the previous grinder
9:50
and this grinder and the next grinder too,
9:52
they are what's called stepped grinders,
9:54
where you adjust the grind here at the bottom
9:56
by fixed amounts.
9:58
This is sort of a step that kind of clicks into place.
10:01
And that's a controlled movement.
10:02
That means that you've got pretty good control
10:04
of a ground size, but not infinite control in a way.
10:07
And later on, we'll talk about stepless grinders.
10:09
But for the purposes here, steps work very well,
10:12
they're repeatable, they're useful to have.
10:14
This will do a better job grinding coffee
10:16
than the 40 pound grinder, by a good amount actually.
10:20
By not needing a motor, by having you do the hard work
10:23
you can kind of invest a bit more in the other things
10:25
like the burr quality and get better results for less money.
10:29
The downside of course, is that you have to do the grinding
10:32
every time, every morning.
10:34
And if you're growing a lot of coffee
10:35
that can take a while and it is hard work
10:38
grinding the coffee is relatively physical.
10:40
That can change with more expensive grinders
10:42
or bigger grinders,
10:43
but ultimately hand grinding
10:45
is something you have to kind of enjoy doing.
10:47
As you go from 100 pounds
10:48
up to something much more expensive
10:49
in the hand grinder world,
10:51
generally, you're getting an increase in construction.
10:53
Again, this is better made,
10:54
this feels solid, it's great materials,
10:57
but really you're could be paying
10:58
for better grind uniformity.
11:00
And that's what more expensive
11:02
hand grinders generally offer.
11:04
And at this price point
11:05
the grinds coming from this are very, very good.
11:07
And you can grind effectively
11:09
for espresso with an expensive hand grinder,
11:11
it's really hard work, but you can do it
11:13
or you can grind for filter coffee pretty well.
11:14
So that's kind of what you've spent with hand grinders
11:17
going from something pretty cheap,
11:19
cheaper materials, cheaper burr construction,
11:21
less uniformity, and that's what's increased
11:23
as you've gone up and up and up.
11:24
So there are lots of reasons to have a hand grinder.
11:26
It might be that you travel a lot,
11:28
it might be that you like camping,
11:29
it might be that just you enjoy that whole thing.
11:31
But if you are at home
11:32
you're grinding coffee every single day,
11:34
then I would recommend investing
11:35
in an electric coffee grinder.
11:38
And that's where we start here.
11:39
So this grinder here is cheaper than this hand grinder.
11:41
It's a little bit more expensive than this grinder here,
11:44
but it's a great way to start the day.
11:46
You have an electric motor in there
11:48
and that spinning a conical burr set.
11:50
And that's what you tend to see
11:51
at entry-level decent home electric grinder price points.
11:55
Now cheaper grinders will have cheaper motors
11:58
and because grinding coffee is hard work,
12:01
a cheaper motor will overcome
12:02
the sort of power needed to crush those beans
12:05
by just spinning faster.
12:06
So you'll tend to see cheaper grinders
12:08
have faster RPMs on their motors.
12:10
They don't always grind coffee through the burrs quicker,
12:13
but they will generally be a little bit louder.
12:16
That motor spinning generates some noise,
12:18
if it's spinning very fast, the way it cuts coffee
12:20
you'll just get a bit more noise in the morning.
12:22
This grinder, as you tend to see at this price point
12:24
is a stepped grinder.
12:25
So you've got fixed steps
12:26
and it's not really able to do espresso, right?
12:30
We talked about having a cheaper motor
12:31
spinning a bit faster,
12:33
but when you're grinding very, very, very fine
12:35
you need a lot of power,
12:36
you need a lot of talk in that motor
12:38
and cheaper motors just can't do it.
12:40
So you tend to see cheaper grinders like this are great
12:43
if you need filter coffee,
12:44
but not great if you're trying to brew espresso.
12:47
If you look at say a filter dedicated grinder
12:49
at about 125 pounds going up to say 250 pounds,
12:54
then you see a variation in the features
12:56
that's kind of interesting.
12:56
This grinder was initially designed
12:58
to hold like a bag of coffee in the hopper here
13:00
and have a little timer on the side
13:02
that you would adjust it, you'd push go
13:03
and it would grind for a fixed amount of time
13:05
to dispense the amount of coffee that you wanted.
13:07
But that's not how many people
13:09
want a coffee grinder to work.
13:10
You want what's called a single dose grinder.
13:12
Where you're gonna put in what you need
13:14
and no more in terms of coffee beans
13:16
for that drink, that batch, whatever it's gonna be.
13:18
It might be that you wanna keep the coffee stored
13:20
and sealed away and not sitting in the grinder.
13:22
It might be that have more than one coffee at home
13:25
and you wanna vary one bean to the next.
13:27
A grinder like this is designed to be a single-dose grinder.
13:30
You can't really fit that much coffee on the top here,
13:32
so you'd only pour in what you'd need.
13:34
Instead of having a timer
13:36
this has an auto shutoff that stops the grinder
13:38
when it's no longer grinding coffee.
13:40
This grinder, like this grinder is a stepped grinder.
13:42
So you've got fixed increments
13:43
that you can adjust the grind size by.
13:45
And this grinder is also a filter coffee only grinder,
13:48
it's motor it's set up is really built around
13:50
filter coffee and not espresso.
13:52
What you tended to see historically
13:54
was when you need espresso
13:56
you had a dedicated espresso style grinder.
13:59
And this is a pretty good example.
14:00
It's a bit of a jump in price
14:01
because you've got a more substantial motor in there
14:04
and this is about I think 350 pounds
14:06
which is some pretty serious money.
14:07
Now this is designed really
14:10
to be a dedicated espresso grinder.
14:11
And it's a little bit more traditional in its design,
14:14
which means it's got a large hopper on top
14:16
to again, hold a big bag of coffee beans in there
14:18
and grind what you need when you need it.
14:21
Many people choose not to do that as I said,
14:23
and use this as single dose,
14:24
though you'd probably wanna replace this hopper
14:26
with something more appropriate.
14:27
What you see as you go from a filter coffee
14:30
dedicated grinder to an espresso dedicated grinder
14:32
is not just the ability to grind finer,
14:34
but you tend to see stepless adjustment, right?
14:38
Where you control the finest or the coarseness
14:40
it's usually just a wheel
14:41
that you can move as little or as much as you want.
14:43
Espresso requires very small adjustments to grind in size
14:46
to have quite a substantial change
14:48
in the way that the coffee brews.
14:49
So you want as much control as is possible.
14:52
So that's what you tend to see
14:54
in a dedicated espresso grinder.
14:55
This will grind using time.
14:57
So you push go and it'll grind for say 9.2 seconds
15:00
to give you a consistent dose of coffee.
15:02
This kind of grinder, you can buy in a huge number
15:04
of different configurations from different manufacturers.
15:06
You'll have different motor sizes,
15:08
different burrs sizes, different burr shapes,
15:10
you know, different kind of technologies
15:12
controlling how much coffee it grinds as it grinds.
15:15
But the base principle is kind of there.
15:17
If you're grinding for espresso
15:18
you need that more powerful motor
15:20
and that tends to mean you need to spend more money
15:22
and that's where your money is going.
15:24
Now, these two grinders are emblematic
15:26
of more modern approaches to grinders.
15:28
This kind of grinder has existed
15:30
for 60, if not 70 years now.
15:32
These are much newer,
15:34
as you'll see they're both grind to order grinders
15:36
they have no real space to hold much coffee,
15:38
they'll hold a single dose under no more,
15:40
but they're also designed to go all the way
15:42
from coarser filter grinds
15:44
through to very fine espresso grinds.
15:46
This one is a flat burr grinder
15:48
and this one is a conical burr grinder.
15:50
This one is a little bit cheaper
15:51
I think at about 400 pounds,
15:52
this one is a little bit more expensive at 500 pounds.
15:55
Feature wise, they're both very similar
15:56
you're grinding into a little collection bin
15:58
that you might then use to pour into a pour-over
16:00
or pour directly into a portafilter
16:02
if you're making a espresso.
16:03
Now the difference of price between the two
16:04
might come down to the design and construction of these,
16:07
the materials used or the components used,
16:10
it might also come down
16:11
to their approach to things like retention.
16:13
Now retention isn't something that we've talked about yet
16:15
but it is something that's actually very important
16:17
and you'll see discussed
16:18
in a lot of different grinder reviews.
16:20
When you put coffee beans into a grinder
16:22
it'll go into a chamber that holds the cutting discs
16:24
those spin, those push out the grounds,
16:27
ideally all of them,
16:28
but typically not quite all of them.
16:31
There might be anywhere from 0.2 of a gram to two grams
16:35
or even sometimes more stuck inside the grinder
16:37
that the mechanism is unable to completely push out.
16:40
Now with more traditional designs like this one
16:42
that wasn't considered a huge issue
16:45
because, you know, it'll be pushed out
16:47
when you grind for coffee the next time.
16:49
The downside is when you change your grind
16:51
you'll have some of the retained old grind setting
16:54
that you would need to purge out.
16:56
That's a little bit wasteful
16:57
and the more you need to purge out with a grinder,
17:00
the more wasteful that grinder is.
17:01
Some commercial grinders can need 20 or 30 grams purging,
17:05
not acceptable, but that's how things were for a long time.
17:07
More modern solutions might need a couple of grams,
17:10
if anything at all.
17:11
So design around retention is really a key thing.
17:14
Here you've got quite a different approach,
17:16
the retention is dealt with by the sort of innate design
17:18
of the burr chamber.
17:19
Here you've got a bellows
17:21
where you'd push down that would blow air
17:22
through the grinding chamber
17:24
pushing out the last bit of coffee
17:25
into the collection cup below.
17:27
That's the kind of idea there.
17:28
How a grinder deals with retention,
17:30
be it bellows or be it a little knocker
17:32
on the side of it is something you should think about,
17:35
and decide how you wanna spend your money
17:37
because it will impact your kind of workflow in the morning.
17:39
Do you wanna have to go and clack a thing a few times
17:41
or press the bellows a few times?
17:43
If it doesn't bother you and it saves you some money,
17:46
then it's worth considering.
17:47
But retention is important
17:48
and retention is discussed a lot
17:50
when you watch other reviews of grinders on YouTube
17:52
or read about them on websites.
17:53
So the understanding I think is really, really, really key.
17:56
Now, one last note on conical versus flat burrs
17:59
and I don't want to get too deeply
18:01
into an esoteric discussion here,
18:03
but some people believe that conical burrs
18:05
suit espresso a little bit more.
18:07
That having a little bit more diversity of size of particle
18:10
can help give some more texture,
18:12
some more body to your espresso.
18:14
Other people prefer sort of flat burr style espresso
18:17
where you have a little bit more clarity,
18:18
maybe more sweetness, but not quite as much texture.
18:21
Understanding that is a consideration
18:23
if you're getting into the fine end
18:25
of dialing into espresso,
18:26
when you've got a great machine
18:27
and you want a great grinder to match it.
18:29
But if it's your first grinder
18:31
it's not something you necessarily need to obsess
18:33
about until your technique
18:34
and other aspects of coffee making catch up to that.
18:37
Now, one last note on burrs is that some grinders
18:40
have options for different burrs that you can install.
18:43
Grinders like this or this,
18:44
you can install different burrs
18:46
from different manufacturers
18:47
that will give you different results.
18:49
If you are shopping for a grinder
18:50
and you're kind of wanting to future-proof it,
18:52
considering a grinder that has some options
18:55
for a grinder burrs is one thing
18:57
to maybe just bear in mind as you're shopping.
18:59
That's not essential, but it is a kind of nice to have,
19:03
if you're thinking about buying a grinder
19:04
that's gonna last you for a really long time
19:06
without worrying about needing to constantly upgrade.
19:09
Now, these nine grinders I have here
19:11
are I think viable first-time purchases,
19:13
even though we've gone all the way up to 500 pounds.
19:15
I could see this still being
19:17
someone's first coffee grinder at home.
19:18
I did want to include a little bit more
19:20
just to explain how people can end up spending
19:23
enormous amounts of money on coffee grinders
19:25
for what they're chasing.
19:26
Now, this grinder in the end is incredibly expensive
19:28
it's three and a half thousand dollars
19:30
but I think it's a good example of how far people will go
19:32
in the chase for better uniformity, better construction
19:36
or better design or better build, more control
19:38
here you've got variable RPM.
19:40
I can change the speed of my motor
19:42
to achieve different results in how it grinds.
19:45
The workflow is kind of different and very nice.
19:47
It's beautiful, I can easily switch the burrs out in it.
19:50
You know, these kind of details
19:51
are what you end up paying for.
19:53
Now understand that going from a more entry-level grinder
19:56
to something like this is a big leap in quality
19:59
and a great return on your investment.
20:01
Going from someone like this, up to someone like this,
20:04
is an increasing quality, but it's a smaller leap,
20:06
it's more incremental increase for a lot more money.
20:09
And that's true of most things in this world, right?
20:12
Like the closer you get to sort of the end goal,
20:15
the more expensive and the more difficult
20:16
it is to do any sort of an upgrade.
20:18
I'm not saying this is bad value for money,
20:20
but if you're looking at spending
20:21
a lot of money on the coffee grinder,
20:23
you really have to have some very specific problems
20:25
that only it will solve for you.
20:27
As a final note, these look like they go
20:29
from sort of the lowest quality to the highest quality,
20:32
but that isn't quite true.
20:34
Hand grinders are a cheaper way to achieve better quality,
20:38
better grind uniformity at lower prices
20:41
'cause you don't have to spend money on the motor,
20:43
so you're just spending on burr and construction generally.
20:46
So that is the beginner's guide to coffee grinders.
20:49
And it's there a hope to help you build a little flow chart
20:51
for you and your needs and your budget.
20:54
If you've got 300 pounds
20:56
and you want a filter coffee grinder,
20:58
then I can help you get to where you need to go
21:00
based on your needs.
21:01
Do you want absolute quality for the money
21:03
or do you want electric motor
21:05
to help you do some of the work?
21:07
These are questions I can't answer for you,
21:09
but hopefully now you can answer them for yourself
21:11
and make a better decision.
21:13
And do know there are still things
21:14
that we haven't talked about here
21:15
that are little details
21:16
that are worth looking out for in reviews.
21:18
Things like the, not just the loudness of a grinder,
21:20
but the quality of sound.
21:22
Does it great on you?
21:23
That kind of stuff.
21:23
Things like the user interface,
21:25
does it frustrate you?
21:26
Is it quirky?
21:27
Is it frustrating?
21:28
Is it finicky?
21:28
Those things are important and should be looked out for
21:31
when you're checking out a review before you purchase.
21:34
But now I wanna hear from you down in the comments below.
21:37
Do you have one of these?
21:38
Are you thinking about upgrading to one of these?
21:40
What are you looking for in a coffee grinder?
21:42
And how has this video potentially helped you
21:44
make a better decision?
21:46
I'd love your feedback, I'd love your thoughts.
21:48
But for now, I'll say thank you so much for watching
21:50
and I hope you have a great day.
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