Bodum: IBIS Electric Kettle $27, 6-Pack 12-Oz Pavina Double Wall Medium Glass
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IBIS Electric Kettle is too small. They make a 51oz version. this is tiny at only 34oz.
Plus it has a plastic liner, makes the water taste weird.
pass.
I've bought the 6 pack glasses before and they're pretty good for espressos. I did break two just being clumsy and one started to leak into the double wall. This was with heavy use while washing them multiple times a day for the past year. Would still buy again, sipping espresso out of one as I write this
There are other brands that make this but make sure you get borosilicate glass
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank NmnT
11-18-2021 at 01:31 AM.
Quote
from plasbo
:
I have been using those double wall glasses for 15 more years.
Those mid size double wall glasses are more fragile than smaller ones, and they are a little too large, mug cup size. I would recommend small size. Average life of small ones is about 2 years in my house, while the life of large ones is less than a year.
I have also been a double-wall glass guy for about 15 years. I've owned Bodum, Luigi Bormioli, Joy Jolt and Zwilling glassware. All glasses were / are hand-washed and air-dried 100% of the time. They all seem to have a shelf or table-life up to two years. Joy Jolt is lasting about 3 years and coincidentally, had the "widest" cup bottom. So whatever you choose, try to stick to the widest diameter bottoms first, and then the glass height (if you're using an espresso machine) & volume are next most important, with style and price following, at your discretion.
Bodum (most expensive) and Luigi Bormjoli (least expensive) were the most fragile (accidental tip overs on the counter sent shards all over the place for many feet past the point of impact; in the sink, they mostly stayed contained). My Zwillings are at two years now and the one that didn't break in the sink (my fault), now has water moisture in between the walls; Likely because the silicone plug dried out and the hole has trapped in the accumulated moisture.
So, happy hunting! For double-wall tumblers, Sun's Tea glassware seem to be a higher gauge glass as they are very strong (still working perfectly for over two years, but not used nearly as much as my daily coffee mugs... you just have to get used to the slightly thicker mouth rim when drinking; yes, it's kinda weird feeling..). Hope this helps..
I'm a fan of their tea glasses - I'll usually put my tea into a thermos bottle and then pour into the small cups as I drink. Keeps it nice and hot for sipping. That said, they're pretty fragile. I haven't broken any, but my wife has dropped two and they're pretty much going to shatter into a billion shards if you drop them from any appreciable height.
That said, unless you're only doing black tea and coffee, I'd recommend getting a kettle with temp control. At the very least, one with buttons for various types of tea. I bought one with Boil, French press, Oolong, green, white, herbal, delicate after years with a straight "boil" kettle and I wish I would've sprung the cash on it earlier because it sure beats bringing water to boil and waiting a few minutes every time I wanted to brew a green tea.
Most of the negative reviews complain about the collection box being poorly designed, with coffee grounds flying everywhere and sticking to everything because of static.
Not quite as cheap, but Bodum's nicer grinder with a borosilicate glass collection jar is also on sale. $62.99 after the 10% off.
Most of the negative reviews complain about the collection box being poorly designed, with coffee grounds flying everywhere and sticking to everything because of static.
Not quite as cheap, but Bodum's nicer grinder with a borosilicate glass collection jar is also on sale. $62.99 after the 10% off.
My wife is wanting a grinder for Christmas. So I should stay away from this? I definitely could spend more on one but I don't know what I would be getting.
Don't know the $40 (usually $60) bodum burr grinder, but the $70 (usually 100) bodum burr burr grinder is very good for everything but espresso (it just isn't fine or consistent enough to brew a good espresso shot). Baratza espresso quality grinders start at the over $300 and there are brand that I prefer to them as they have treated me poorly and given the many alternatives in the market I never looked back.
you may want to consider the capresso burr grinder for about $100 as a alternative. It has been perhaps the best burr grinder value on the market for years and can even work as an entry lever espresso grinder.
Are the double walled glasses real glass? Last time they had a deal I ordered it and the were double walled plastic cups. First time I was washing one I dropped it in the sink and it broke all to pices.
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Plus it has a plastic liner, makes the water taste weird.
pass.
There are other brands that make this but make sure you get borosilicate glass
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Or HomeGoods seems to always carry double wall glass mugs for cheap as well.
For 10% off
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank NmnT
Those mid size double wall glasses are more fragile than smaller ones, and they are a little too large, mug cup size. I would recommend small size. Average life of small ones is about 2 years in my house, while the life of large ones is less than a year.
Bodum (most expensive) and Luigi Bormjoli (least expensive) were the most fragile (accidental tip overs on the counter sent shards all over the place for many feet past the point of impact; in the sink, they mostly stayed contained). My Zwillings are at two years now and the one that didn't break in the sink (my fault), now has water moisture in between the walls; Likely because the silicone plug dried out and the hole has trapped in the accumulated moisture.
So, happy hunting! For double-wall tumblers, Sun's Tea glassware seem to be a higher gauge glass as they are very strong (still working perfectly for over two years, but not used nearly as much as my daily coffee mugs... you just have to get used to the slightly thicker mouth rim when drinking; yes, it's kinda weird feeling..). Hope this helps..
That said, unless you're only doing black tea and coffee, I'd recommend getting a kettle with temp control. At the very least, one with buttons for various types of tea. I bought one with Boil, French press, Oolong, green, white, herbal, delicate after years with a straight "boil" kettle and I wish I would've sprung the cash on it earlier because it sure beats bringing water to boil and waiting a few minutes every time I wanted to brew a green tea.
Which kettle do you have?
Most of the negative reviews complain about the collection box being poorly designed, with coffee grounds flying everywhere and sticking to everything because of static.
Not quite as cheap, but Bodum's nicer grinder with a borosilicate glass collection jar is also on sale. $62.99 after the 10% off.
Somewhat confusingly, it's named exactly the same, but here's the link: https://www.bodum.com/us/en/10903-01us-3-bistro
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Most of the negative reviews complain about the collection box being poorly designed, with coffee grounds flying everywhere and sticking to everything because of static.
Not quite as cheap, but Bodum's nicer grinder with a borosilicate glass collection jar is also on sale. $62.99 after the 10% off.
Somewhat confusingly, it's named exactly the same, but here's the link: https://www.bodum.com/us/en/10903-01us-3-bistro
Thanks
https://www.amazon.com/Bodum-1175...merReviews [amazon.com]
you may want to consider the capresso burr grinder for about $100 as a alternative. It has been perhaps the best burr grinder value on the market for years and can even work as an entry lever espresso grinder.
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