can anyone recommend a burr grinder? something durable, well engineered and designed, and priced at the point of diminishing returns?
This could be a controversial question!
Depends where you live. In Australia, I'd say the Sunbeam EM0480 Cafe Series Conical Burr Coffee Grinder is a great bet and was widely considered to be the
least you can pay for a good Conical Burr grinder, some years ago when I bought one.
Sunbeam are of the same quality standing as Breville products are in the US - i.e. good, but only 'home appliance good' not "Tutti-originale' we're Italian good, we're the Leica of Coffee machines good." However you would expect years of daily use out of Breville conical so that brand would meet all your requirements.
If you're in Australia, you can always check out an Aussie Coffee forum "Coffeesnobs" (the name says it all). Plenty of talk about grinders there. I use the Sunbeam myself and, yep, it grinds precisely and consistently and frees me to worry about dosing, tamping, steam, pressure, heat, lunar eclipse, home-roasted v store roasted and so on. I've used it about 4 times a day for 4 years now. Works as good as the day I bought it.
'Coffee' makes questions like "What's the best compensating developer, for me?" seem trivial - cause there are lots of variables about diminishing returns - i.e. stepper, steppless, doser, timer, hand cranked v electrical ...
However if you're Stateside then I'd recommend you look at
www.seattlecoffeegear.com and check out their offerings. They have good videos and the lady barrista seems knowledgeable.
Of course as the connoisseurs that we Aussies are, we're used to good coffee here in Australia
😱, and so what Americans think is good coffee might not be the same thing :angel:
😀
But seriously give the Seattle people a go. They have a series of videos on choosing a grinder and there's always the US forum Coffeegeeks, they have a grinder buying guide.
http://coffeegeek.com/guides/howtobuyanespressomachine/getagrinder
I'm sure you know that if you spend less than $1500 on a grinder, you're going to be compromising and if you don't take coffee seriously enough then you'll have to live with the consequences ...
Seriously though, as you no doubt know, an $80-$150 grinder will grind coffee that will let you make better than many coffee shops can produce - and that's a fact. If $80 is too high, look out for a Kyocera hand cranked grinder - Kyocera are Japanese, used to own Yashica and are ceramics experts. Their little coffee grinder has conical ceramic grinding elements and will do the job very nicely apparently. Probably retails for about forty bucks for an adjustable one? There are cheaper hand cranked brands, Hario?