🔥 Elevate your coffee ritual with precision and style ☕
The OXOBrew Gooseneck Electric Kettle combines stainless steel durability with advanced features like adjustable temperature control from 104 to 212°F, a precision gooseneck spout for controlled pouring, and a built-in brew timer. Its cordless design with a 360° swivel base and automatic 30-minute shutoff ensures both convenience and safety, making it the ultimate tool for professional-quality pour-over coffee and tea at home or office.
Material Features | Corrosion-resistant, cool-touch, and elegant |
Product Care Instructions | Hand Wash |
Material Type | Stainless Steel |
Cable Length | 8.07 Inches |
Item Weight | 3.6 Pounds |
Item Dimensions L x W x H | 12"L x 8.4"W x 7.9"H |
Capacity | 1 Liters |
Finish Types | Stainless Steel |
Color | Stainless Steel |
Voltage | 100 Volts |
Wattage | 1500 watts |
Container Type | Kettle |
Additional Features | Gas Stovetop Compatible, Electric Stovetop Compatible |
C**C
Almost 3 months in - works very well
Update @6 months in:Still working well and heats up just as fast as the first day. I’ve found myself starting to prefer the handle over the Fellow EKG style so I guess it’s a whatever-you’re-used-to situation.Works well with tea but may be a *tad* slow for french press coffee.New use cases I’ve come across:+ Boiling/preheating water from cold for cooking+ Using remaining water to soak utensils and such to scrub off the harder bits of food+ Same thing as above but for stainless steel pans+ Exorcising my inner demons (jk)——For context, I previously owned the Greater Goods gooseneck kettle, which was a very solid kettle and poured very well. My main reason for upgrading was that I wanted to have a kettle in my work office for midday decaf or the like. Additionally, the kettle poured too slowly for the Tetsu Kasuya technique with the Hario Mugen.No issues whatsoever—it pours well, heats up very fast, has large capacity, and has maintained temperature well.Things to note:+ Compared to the GG kettle, this doesn’t pour as intuitively. That’s not to say it doesn’t pour well, the GG kettle just happens to be that good with regards to pouring+ As many have stated, this kettle tends to pour fast. Many complain about it, but the way I see it is that one simply has to learn better technique/adjust. I’m not a barista by any means, but I am able to control the pour decently well imo, just takes practice and some mindfulness. A tip: if you want to pour more slowly, try tilting the kettle a bit—learned this with the GG kettle and it helps with controlling the flow. You can think of it like twisting a wine bottle as you finish pouring.+ It is kind of noisy but not any more noisy than one would expect from any kettle really+ While it is annoying how the base automatically turns on when you take the kettle off, I have not had any real issues with the base+ Base knob is pretty satisfying to use imo. This is more on the subjective side, of course. Just feels smooth with tactile clicks (they’re silent) to me+ Knob button clicks are also pretty nice to me—not loud and has a pleasing sound to it imo+ Can’t evaluate the timer function or its accessibility as I use a scale with a timer+ I definitely prefer the handle type you’d fine on a Stagg Fellow/GG kettle. That being said, it’s still quite comfortable to use, and it feels fairly balanced and intuitive. I like it, just not my first choice+ The balancing of the handle makes the kettle feel lighter than you’d expect and easy to handle, but you still feel the weight of the water+ The quaint aesthetic is pretty nice and fits in with most kitchens. Unless you have a more modern style kitchen and kitchenware, the kettle will look great and fit in nicely+ The round base is quite a nice unexpected “upgrade” for me actually. It has a smaller footprint than the usual square bases and contains grooves underneath that allows you to route the wire such that it can come out about 30 degrees to the left, out the middle, or about 30 degrees to the right+ A caveat to the previous point: the power cable is a bit annoying to keep in the base routes as it is quite stiff widthwise. Minor inconvenience at worst though+ Base and kettle feel sturdy. I have no doubts the kettle will last. Can’t comment on the base longevity though as that is moreso a time-will-tell situation electronicallyAdditional uses I didn’t think about till it popped up:+ MREs+ Theraflu+ Sauce packets requiring boiling/hot water to thaw+ Mac and cheese sauce packets whenever applicable+ Portafilter rinsingWill update as time passes
R**.
It's just the best one. Don't buy a cheap one.
My Oxo kettle pooped out after 6 years. I thought I'd save some money and use a cheaper one (tried a few as I wanted one for home and one for office). Well, the Oxo was just much better on multiple fronts:-The design is clean. And it's easy for a smaller, not super strong person to pick up and pour.-VERY easy to turn on/off and change the temperature. This ease of operation was severely lacking in other kettles.-All stainless steel interior. I want to limit my plastics exposure, especially hot plastics.So, I bought a new Oxo. I threw away the old kettle, so I can't say for sure, but I think my new Oxo kettle is less apt to leak at the lid if you pour when it's full. (I think they modified the spout so that it starts to pour before you've tipped it as much.) But as someone said, the lid is not airtight. For what it's worth, I used an Oxo kettle that spilled a bit if I wasn't careful every day for six years and it wasn't a big deal. You just learn to pour over the counter or sink, not over your feet. :)
S**1
The ideal water heater for pour-over coffee enthusiasts
It's still early days with the OXO Adjustable Pour-Over Kettle, but this product really checks off all the boxes for pour-over coffee enthusiasts. In fact, the packaging seems to be heavily marketed towards a specific coffee brewing purpose, even though there's a variety of other uses for a gooseneck kettle with regulated temperature.My previous setup for pour-over (I use Chemex, V60, and Kalita Wave at various times...kind of an addict) was a stovetop gooseneck or an electric Bodum kettle. In either case, I would need to use a thermometer to gauge temperature, or just boil it and hope it cools to about the 200-205 degree range when I needed it. It really was not an ideal solution for how often I do pour-over. So, I looked at some options like the Stagg EKG ($150 for the non-Bluetooth model), but as sexy as device is, it just seemed overpriced for something that could fail and fundamentally just needs to add water.Enter the OXO model, which has a street price of around $100.00. I actually really like the aesthetics of the design - particularly the base, which is a glossy black, compact enough to tuck into my coffee cabinet, and has a flat cord that wraps twice around the inside the base (good idea, OXO!). Even better, in reviews on YouTube and by the Seattle Coffee Gear demos, it seemed to perform as well or better than the Stagg, and actually operates at a higher wattage. I think it heats to a boil in about 3-5 minutes, though that obviously varies by water volume and starting temperature.Since the process of pour-over coffee is supposed to take around 3-4 minutes (still working on my grind size and timing), it can actually be quite a challenge to keep water at a specific temperature other than boiling for that full period of time. On the OXO kettle, you set the temperature, it beeps to alert you when the water is heated (appreciated), and then it will keep the water at the set temperature, provided you return it to the base within 60 seconds of removing it. There is also a simple kitchen timer accessible by long-pressing the "OXO" button - useful for timing your pours. The number display appears almost white in photographs, but is actually a light blue, and very easy to read.Two additional things I REALLY like about the OXO kettle that may not be readily apparent:(1) The last temperature you set it at saves on the device, even after you unplug it and plug it back in. HUGE. Some other units have "presets", and the OXO knob is a little too "fine" to turn all the way up from room temperature quickly, so this would have been a major annoyance to have to reset to 201 degrees, or whatever your preferred brew setting is.(2) The thermometer inside the kettle is very accurate and extremely fast. I try not to heat more water than I need, but sometimes, I realize during the process that I'm going to need more. I've even added cold water into the unit while it is heating (I'm sure OXO advises against this for various safety reasons, so I am NOT advocating this), and the thermometer instantly displays the cooler aggregate temperature. And I checked the final temperature with a good external thermometer and it seems accurate within a degree or so.I quick word on some of the negative reviews - this is always a concern, but it just seems like par for the course for this kind of product. All of the popular options (Bonavita, Stagg), as well as the cheaper regulated kettles, are littered with anecdotal complaints about leakage, rust, or failure of the heating components. It is impossible for me to know if those individual problems are due to bad units, misuse, or poor user maintenance. If I encounter any such issue, I would certainly update my score and review content. But the OXO unit does come with a 2-year warranty, and I feel like that is a reasonable period of time for any inherent product "defect" to show itself. For this type of kitchen product, I would be perfectly happy with a 5-10 year window of operation with regular use.The OXO Adjustable Temperature Electric Kettle heats water faster than most of its competitors, manages to stay relatively compact for storage, and has all the key features a pour-over enthusiast would want. Highly recommended.
R**.
Love it
This is the nicest kettle we've ever owned and it is way worth the price. It has great features and looks great - the beeping noise it makes is very soft and isn't jarring and it keeps the water warm/heated. It also boils really fast and I like watching the number climb.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
1 month ago