Reddit Reddit reviews Hario Ceramic"Canister" Coffee Mill Manual Grinder, 120g

We found 7 Reddit comments about Hario Ceramic"Canister" Coffee Mill Manual Grinder, 120g. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Kitchen & Dining
Coffee Grinders
Coffee, Tea & Espresso
Home & Kitchen
Manual Coffee Grinders
Hario Ceramic
Manual coffee grinder using burrs made of ceramicBurrs make for a more consistent grind that’s easily adjustable and set for repeat useCeramic burrs don't transfer heat and shave the coffee beans vs cracking the beans like blade grinders120 Gram CapacityHandwash only
Check price on Amazon

7 Reddit comments about Hario Ceramic"Canister" Coffee Mill Manual Grinder, 120g:

u/ejatx · 3 pointsr/Coffee

I started with my former roommate's Hario Skerton, but we no longer live together so I had to buy a new one and settled on the Hario ceramic "canister" coffee mill. I bought it around Christmas and with a Prime trial so I was able to get it for $50. https://www.amazon.com/Hario-Ceramic-Canister-Coffee-Grinder/dp/B003EEGDSM

u/catsandtats · 2 pointsr/Coffee

Most of these grinders are blade grinders, which are almost impossible to get a good and uniform bean size with. This is a problem if you want a quality cup of coffee, especially when using a french press. I would not recommend getting a blade grinder under any circumstance. If money is an issue, you can get relatively cheap hand burr grinders. I have this one, and I am pretty pleased with it. It's hard work, but gets a pretty uniform grind size.

u/devildocjames · 1 pointr/funny

A manual coffee grinder, to be specific. You can adjust how fine you want the grind. I use this, but, there are cheaper ones.

u/oalsaker · 1 pointr/Coffee

You can buy it on ebay. Here is one offer.

Also found it on Amazon

u/HardcoreHamburger · 1 pointr/Coffee

In my opinion, it just simply does not allow you the control over the quality of the grind that is necessary for a consistent pour over (I only do pour over as of now.). I actually own a hario ceramic grinder. I bought it cause it looks super nice and people gave it good reviews on amazon. But I found that it left behind an unacceptable amount of large chunks and fines for the kind of coffee quality I want. If you truly only care about how your final cup tastes, you probably wouldn't hate a hand grinder. I have yet to do a side by side comparison of my hario grinder and my baratza vario, but getting the vario certainly hasn't revolutionized my end result. But I warn you, I thought I wouldn't mind the manual grinding, and it became something I dreaded doing when I wanted to make coffee. Don't get me wrong, any hand grinder is infinitely better than pre-ground or a blade grinder. I just wanted something that gave me more grind options and better quality. And I wanted to enjoy the process of making coffee and not have to dread grinding my coffee. For me, buying a nice electric burr grinder was completely worth it to actually enjoy making my coffee and to have at least one of the many variables in the process finally under control.