this post was submitted on 02 Jul 2025
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... Or not... I need help with a sanity check.

Tl;dr. Yes it is expensive but is it actually a good grinder?

I'm so ready to pull the trigger for a buy once, cry once, purchase decision for a new grinder and i have been looking for a solidly build, European made, all purpose coffee grinder to replace my ageing Nivona Cafe Grano 130 (aka Capresso Infinity)

I have been looking around a lot and in a previous post where I asked about this Eurika was suggested and it feels like the best option for me among the bunch.

But this is a lot of money so before buying I need to know if what I'm about to do isn't completely stupid.

I want a single dose grinder with low retention since i change beans and brew method frequently. I love to experiment with all roast types so the grinder should be able to have some good all purpose burrs. I don't intent to have multiple burr sets or multiple grinders. I just want one that can do everything to a decent level (no perfectionism needed) and the grinder should last me a lifetime if possible.

I mainly brew with 3 methods. French press, pour over, and moka pot. I occasionally dabble with Turkish coffee but I have always just purchased pre ground for that but a grinder that can go towards that is interesting but not strictly necessary.

I have no need for espresso grind levels at the moment but since this is a by once grinder who's to say I won't own a small espresso machine in 5 years, so not needing to buy a new grinder for that is appealing.

The main reason i want to upgrade is the fact that my current grinder produces very uneven grinds with a lot of fines and some coarse bits at the same time making my French press bitter and my pour over and moka pot clog up easily. Tbh. I find the unevenness on par with a good blade grinder. Lighter roast coffees works the best but the uneven grind makes for what I feel is under extraction since it lacks sweetness even though I grind relatively fine, long brew time and high temps. I would love to get more clarity out of my beans and taste the more fruitier and sweeter notes. Darker roasts just turn bitter and muddy no matter what i do.

With those needs in place I narrowed it down to the Eurika mignon single dose pro or the mignon zero 65 all purpose which quite a lot cheaper.

The Pro is interesting to me because of the new type burrs that should last forever and the exceptionality low retention. It should also have an antistatic system.

Only downside I can find myself is the very small hopper of 45g. For daily use i grind only 30g of coffee for my French press which is fine, but when i have guests i pull out the big boy brewer where i need to grind 60g - 80g. It is rare i need it and tbh. i can easily live with just grinding 2 times.

So please help me out. Should I just go cry and buy the mignon zero pro or is the mignon zero 65 All purpose just as good or, have i missed some other grinder where the value is much better and my money better spent.

Thank you.

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[–] tankplanker@lemmy.world 3 points 1 day ago

Its a well put together grinder with good build quality. However wouldn't get this grinder if you aren't sure its a good fit for your type of beans and your chosen method of making coffee.

One grinder with one burr set can be great at espresso and another at pour over, its rare to get a burr set that's great at both at this price point, good yes, great no.

Also if you regularly switch between espresso and pour over/immersion it can be a pita with a lot of grinders switching between the two become of how much you have to adjust the dial. I think this one would be multiple turns. It doesn't sound bad but try it, especially when you lose count of how many turns you done. I have two grinders for this exact reason.

If it was me, I would get a decent 64mm grinder as there are a metric ton of good 64mm burrs for all sorts of coffee. A 64mm grinder will enable you to play around a lot more with the burrs. The Oro locks you into their weird size with just their burrs, not good.

Remember I mentioned type of beans? If you like dark roast i would strongly suggest getting a conical grinder rather than a flat burr as it suits those beans better. If you like light roast then typically you want high clarity burrs, medium you could be in-between or in either direction.

[–] Bakkoda@sh.itjust.works 1 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

IMO this is a single purpose grinder and espresso is the target. Just my two cents though.

[–] throbbing_banjo@lemmy.world 10 points 2 days ago (1 children)

You do you, but I just googled the price, and that is an absolutely ludicrous ask for a single-dose grinder.

I'm sure their marketing is awesome, I'm sure there's hundreds of hours of YouTube videos from Coffee Steve about the colossal import of "burr precision" and how you're not really making espresso unless you get it.

But again, if you think you're gonna taste the $250 difference between this and a manual burr grinder that also does other things... you do you

[–] TDCN 1 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Yes it is expensive but I just want a really good grinder where I dont have to compromise and will last a long time. I want to gift myself something nice where I do t have to deal with small annoyances like poor workflow/design, annoying buttons or unnecessary electronic that can break, cheap materials that won't last more than ~5 years, uneven grind or a messy grinder that spills coffe on the table constantly (I had one of those and I hated it)

I'm not really interested in a manual grinder.

[–] throbbing_banjo@lemmy.world 4 points 2 days ago (1 children)

You know what? Do it. Sounds like you've sold yourself on it already.

You've obviously put some time into thinking about this and done your homework, and know what you're looking for.

This post has some real "I don't want to compromise" energy to it, and something tells me if you went with something more reasonably-priced, you'd be tasting that compromise in every shot for a while.

[–] TDCN 1 points 2 days ago

Yeah. It's stupid expensive, but you probably know the feeling. I mostly made the post to make sure that I didn't miss something obvious that was better or if the grinder is not actually performing as advertised. I'm not so familiar with all the various brands.

[–] fritobugger2017@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago

A lot of quality choices at or around that price. I would probably go for the Timemore Sculptor 78/78S.

[–] psud@aussie.zone 3 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)

I don't think you need to worry about the small dose size, these sort of grinders are pretty quick, so it's not much of a problem to grind three batches when you have company

Style wise is not too my taste

[–] TDCN 1 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I don't mind the style so much. I think it's pretty classic. I do care about esthetic and I like a white grinder which Eurika has as well, but the look is secondary to the workflow of the machine and build quality.

Any other brand you'd suggest instead?

[–] psud@aussie.zone 1 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

I like my white Varia VS3, the new model (vs6) has speed control, static reduction and a spout thumper

But it's only a 38mm grinder, so it's slower and hotter than a 68mm one, and it doesn't have as wide an array of alternate grinding burrs.

Others here using 68mm gear will have better advice.

[–] TDCN 1 points 1 day ago

That is a beautiful grinder. Thanks for the tip. Price wise the vs6 its similar but since its from NZ (I think but not sure) I'll probably have to pay import tax on top. I like the smaller design and interchangeable grind geometry on the vs6. The vs3 is probably not for me since I really like light roast coffee and of the manufacturer says it's challenging it's probably very true 😅. The price on the vs3 is very nice tho.

[–] blomvik@sopuli.xyz 1 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I have a Wilfa that can do everything from very coarse to espresso, but it ends up with only 2-3 stops that's fine enough for espresso makmaking it not that useful really.

Buy one that is good for your needs today and worry about espresso when that happens as you'll most likely end up getting a dedicated grinder for that anyway.

[–] TDCN 1 points 2 days ago

How do you find the build quality? I looked at one about 4-5 years ago and it felt very cheap and plasticy on a first hand feel. How is it holding up?