Price: $21.35
(as of Dec 09, 2024 12:24:57 UTC – Details)
The Hario Pour over Coffee starter set is the perfect setup as a gift or a gift for yourself. Start your journey into great Coffee. You’ll look forward to waking up every single day! If you’re looking to get started with Coffee brewing, or know someone you’d like to get started with manual brewing (and has a birthday coming up), then this Hario Starter kit was made for you. This great value boxed kit comes with a Hario V60 Coffee dripper, a Hario V60 Coffee server, and a 100-Pack of V60 Filters.
Hario Starter Kit: Everything you need for a professional pour over cup of coffee at home or work—Just add coffee and water! The perfect starter setup for yourself, or a gift. Great for those new to pour over or manual coffee brewing
Pour Control: The V60 features a single large hole, improving pour flow and providing users the ultimate freedom– Pour water quickly for a light flavor or slower for a rich, deep taste. Better accentuates coffees with floral or fruit flavor notes
Kit Includes: V60 02 Coffee Dripper, V60 02 Coffee Server, and V60 02 Disposable Paper Filters (40-pack)
Japanese Design: Sleek, modern and minimalist coffee set to suit any kitchen design. Heatproof glass server with BPA-free handle, lid and measuring spoon. Made in Japan
Product Details: Size 02 makes 1-4 cups coffee; 700mL capacity
CrazyAboutBooks –
Hario Pour Over Coffee Starter Set
For years I happily used a glass Hario coffee dripper until the dreaded day came: I broke it. I knew that my repurchase would be another Hario so the search began. During the Hario search this starter set came up and since it is a complete set-up I was intrigued. The greatest concern was the plastic dripper–I admit to being a glass snob but there I was without a dripper stuck with instant coffee kept for cooking purposes, ugh. Desperate to be sure.This set is adorable. It is complete, arriving with everything needed to drip coffee except water and coffee grounds. I really did not ever again want to be without a dripper so since this set contained everything needed to get started including 40 paper cones, I bought it. At the same time I also selected a small traveling glass dripper. Plastic versus glass would be determined once both items arrived especially since in the reviews of this Hario set the issue of plastic versus glass came up.The best surprise about this set is that the included paper cones were non bleached. So I decided to try this dripper first. I paid a lot of attention. First of all, the plastic dripper did not absorb any of the heat so that the coffee was actually hotter than the coffee had been dripped through glass. The coffee did not acquire any negative taste from the filter. The filter is designed in such a way that so far it has fit on every cup I use. The circle on the bottom to hold the filter in place will either fit inside the coffee cup or outside it. Either way it stays put. So far I was really liking this set-up.Next I tried the glass travel dripper (it is smaller so not really good for day-to-day usage but good for the experiment). The dripper did absorb a lot of heat and indeed the coffee was not as steaming hot as it was from the plastic filter. As a result I switched over to the plastic filter which I cannot break and am totally happy doing so. This set is so worth the money. It looks good, functions as it should and even if I break the pot, I still have a dripper to use. I already had unbleached Hario paper cones set up on my subscribe and save so all’s well that ends well!! (BTW: it is recommended to use water at 200 degrees for dripping, not boiling.)EDIT: I often find useful information in reviews so in case anyone finds it helpful I am adding information about how to use Hario drippers which was included when I bought my glass Hario dripper a few years ago. Those instructions suggested to wet the grounds and wait 30 seconds then slowly pour the rest of the hot water over the wet grounds in a circular motion until the water is completely poured.Some users recommend adding the second pour of water in such a way as to keep it at the same level. I have tried that or simply slowly poured the water in without regard to height of water. It seems to make little difference in taste. The thing that does matter to taste is skipping the “initial wet the grounds, wait 30 seconds before proceeding pouring the remaining water” step. The instructions with this dripper was different in that a fast drip will differ in taste from a slow drip.Bottom line, experimentation is necessary since some may like the taste by dripping all the water at the same time while others may like the wet grounds first strategy. The amount of coffee grounds obviously will matter too. Regardless of the preferred method one settles on, in my opinion this Hario dripper system is exceptional!!
L. Booth –
Fussy, But Really Good Coffee
>.. I got this because I was frustrated by the Vietnamese Coffee makers. I wanted pour-over coffee, but I wanted it easy and quick. 45 minutes into the Vietnamese Coffee pour-overs, less than 1/4 of a cup had been made, and it was definitely coolish. I just trashed the pfin [?], bought a different one, the same problem. Trashed it and looked for a different pour-over.>.. I knew the Hario name from previous glassware purchases, and watching the videos, it looked both quick and easy. And inexpensive. It has lived up to the hype.>.. Coffee is 5 minutes (+ or -) and is HOT and ready to drink. It takes a bit of arranging, but the coffee is more flavorful than even a Chemex, even though they use the same system. Can’t explain it. I just enjoy it. I suggest you set up with a kettle with a long curving spout and a thermometer. I align the thermometer to read ready when the needle points to the spout, but that’s me. There are Stainless steel kettles and electric ones, I have not tried the electric, but they come recommended.>.. Enjoy the coffee. [And yes, I think the plastic filter holder works better and the coffee is HOTTER.
Kindle Customer –
Wonderful pour over set and not fragile
This Hario set was my first introduction to pour over coffee system. And while there’s nothing like a French Press for flavor, the pour over system is almost as good. For me, I love the taste of French Press, but I really hate the mess of the cleanup.I needed a smaller server and am purchasing one for my current use.I have seen a few review concerning durability. I found that the server was quite durable. Now I did not bang mine around. Nor did I use pressure to seat the dropper. And I only hand washed the server. But I did occasionally heat up leftover coffee in the server in the micro wave.Bottom line is the server is not too fragile for daily use and does not break easily if you respect the material it is made of.
H. A. Byrd –
Use it every day!
Love this unit! I use it every day! Very easy to use once you get your recipe dialed in. Love the red color. I am very careful with the glass but it is very thin. Be careful when using it. Hold heat good. Filters were trash. Tossed them out and got regular white Hario filters. Good price for what it does. I expect I will have it for may years as long as I take care of it. Easy to clean too. Soapy water, hand washed. Easy peasy…
Matthew sider –
Yes itâs true Iâm going risk my name for this product love so much good value for moneyDesign by Quality good for people quick on the go awesome ð
Alejandro Alarcón –
Tarda un poco en llegar ya que viene desde Japón pero hario es calidad
Cristina Yurika Saito –
O produto é de muito boa qualidade. Se você souber utilizar bem, vai extrair bons cafés para beber.
LuÃs Alberto Bartolomeu –
Produto excelente e resistente.
Alex –
I bought this as a replacement for my previous Hario V60 coffee pot, which finally broke after quite a few years. The glass on this pot is quite good. It’s not that thin. Sure, it’s not a commercial grade glass coffee carafe like the ones at donut shops, but I am using this at home and I do my best not to bang it around to shatter it. It’s still glass in the end.I had a Hario Bee Hive coffee pot in the past and while that one looks very nice and elegant, it was more delicate and that chipped a lot quicker than this pot. So bang for the buck (no pun intended), this Hario pot is really good.I bought the RED style because it was the cheaper of the ones listed…and the 40 filters that came with it do not look like the ones from Japan. I haven’t used them yet (because I have a Japan pack opened at the moment), but they resemble the ones made in The Netherlands, which are thicker and the coffee takes longer to drip through…so you may need to adjust your grinds and brewing process accordingly.The plastic dripper is a lot better quality than I had thought it would be. For plastic drippers, I have only used the old Melita single cup one. That is just a cheap few dollar dripper. It does the job when you are camping. Day to day, I have a ceramic one. But the plastic on this dripper is quite thick and makes this quite sturdy. Also being stamped “Made in Japan” makes it feel even better.Overall, this kit is quite good. I just needed a pot, but the overall kit makes it a decent deal — with the exception of the filters from The Netherlands which I don’t like as much…but a set of filters is a set of filters.