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Fellow Ode Brew Grinder - Burr Coffee Grinder Electric - Coffee Bean Grinder with 31 Settings for Drip, French Press & Cold Brew - Small Footprint Electric Grinder - Matte Black

  • Based on 958 reviews
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$255.00 Why this price?
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Availability: Only 10 left in stock, order soon!
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Arrives Saturday, May 18
Order within 8 hours and 53 minutes
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Size: 120v, Type B Plug


Color: Matte Black


Features

  • ODE BREW GRINDER: A powerful, precise, and quieter home coffee grinder with cafe capabilities, Ode was designed to perfect your daily brewed coffee. Grind grounds specifically for AeroPress, pour-over, French press, cold brew, and more.
  • CAFE PERFORMANCE FOR YOUR COUNTERTOP: Grind what you need right before you brew with Ode's single-dose hopper for maximum bean freshness. This coffee grinder has professional-grade 64 mm flat burrs that deliver consistently ground coffee beans.
  • PRECISION GRIND QUALITY: With 11 settings and 31 steps in between, you can easily adjust the grind settings. Use the low settings to get the perfect consistency for your pour-over, or go for a coarse grind to make a rich French press or cold brew.
  • COFFEE BAR ACCESSORY - Ode transforms a morning chore into a quicker, quieter, and more enjoyable coffee-making experience. This sophisticated and modernly designed coffee grinder will turn your countertop into a barista's coffee corner.
  • FELLOW: Experts in coffee with a love for product design, we at Fellow believe coffee is a journey. We are dedicated to melding beautiful design with flawless functionality to help aficionados and beginners alike find the fun in the brewing process.

Color: Matte Black


Brand: Fellow


Material: Aluminum


Style: coffee grinder


Item Weight: 4.5 Kilograms


Item Dimensions LxWxH: 4.7 x 9.5 x 9.4 inches


Wattage: 140.00


Recommended Uses For Product: Grinding


Product Dimensions: 4.7 x 9.5 x 9.4 inches


Item Weight: 9.9 pounds


Manufacturer: Fellow


Country of Origin: China


Item model number: x


Date First Available: January 26, 2021


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Saturday, May 18

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Still a work in progress
Size: 120v, Type B Plug Color: Matte Black
It is frustrating to outlay several hundred dollars on a premium product that is supposed to be a class leader only for there to be issue after issue, which the vendor will happily ask you to pay for in order to get the quality product you bought in the first place. That’s the ODE experience, but also the nature of buying from Fellows, which is a crowdsource funding driven company, with a series of well received but distinctly iterative products to its name. The ODE is a solid product and a good grinder. It is probably on its way to being a great grinder. But several of the novel choices made by its designers have proven to require further refinement to satisfy those very particular about their coffee experience as well as those who simply want a quality product that is a pleasure to use. Coffee nerds already know about the ODE, so let me instead speak to folks who might consider themselves coffee enthusiasts, but who’ve stopped short of making it a lifestyle. Here’s what I think those folks should know… The ODE is not for espresso. By design it does not grind fine enough. But it will work very well for drip coffee, pour over, french press, siphon pots — basically most of your COFFEE coffee preparations Most of us aren’t making espresso at home. So as long as that’s you, this grinder is a good choice. The ODE has a small, low profile bean hopper and is best for brewing 10 cup batches or smaller. Not having a big bean-holding receptacle on top (compared to say the Baratza grinders — also great) might be a feature for you (it was for me) but if you have one of these mega 12 cup drip coffee makers, you might get annoyed at spilling your beans as you try to fill it day by day. The ODE is a pretty good grind experience. The grinder is marginally quieter than some competitors. It has a very handy auto-off function that works well. Just hit the button and it finishes on its own. This was a major selling point for me and I appreciate this functionality every single day over the Baratza grinder that it replaced. You’ll probably appreciate it too. A small caveat — I did find that the front plate on my ODE rattled a bit when grinding (should this really happen on a grinder that uses great industrial design as a major selling point? I think, no), but tucking a little bit of insulating material underneath dealt with the issue easily. The ODE is very messy. One place where I don’t think the designers really scored is in the catch basin. The grinder uses a small metal cup, with a removable rubber lid to catch the finished grounds. This cup is lined up precisely by magnets in the base of the grinder so, in theory, you just sort of push it in and the magnets do the rest. Unfortunately this system, in practice is problematic. Given that grinds stick to the edges of the catch basin and the lid, these two are very difficult to match up. It is fiddley and annoying and the worst part of using the grinder, for me, If you don’t quite get the lid nestled correctly, the whole magnet alignment doesn’t quite work either. And you may not notice until after you’ve started your grind, which then clogs everything up and the ODE beeps at you angrily. At that point, you’ve got to poke your finger (or the finger alternative of your choice) up into the grind mechanism to clear the backed up coffee grounds. This only takes a few moments but it is guaranteed to make a tremendous mess. Even aside from this specific issue, the lid and catch basin aren’t a general pleasure to use. The experience is messy and fussy and did I mention messy? It’s messy. Much more so than the experience with some grinders at a similar quality and price point. The ODE does come with a knocker on the right hand side (sorry lefties, no love for you) but this is more for show. It does nothing to help any of the issues above (in fact, Fellows already has a knocker 2.0 kit available, if you want to pay for it). Likewise, Fellows also has new grinder burrs and a bunch of other new tweaks for the latest version of the ODE — small comfort to those of use who bought in on the promise of a well-considered and well tested product in the first place. If you purchase this grinder, you’ll enjoy it. And it will certainly perform well. It has features that other grinders in its class can’t match. But the experience is still rough around the edges in areas where Fellows has attempted to challenge the way everyone else has been making these tools. If you can live with that, there is a lot to like here that sets the ODE apart from its more traditionally designed rivals. I don’t regret my purchase but my experience with the ODE has led me to be more cautious in the future about investing $$$ in other Fellows products until they have gone through several upgrade cycles. These folks are sincere in their high aims, but I would advise caution about being an early adopter. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on December 4, 2022 by M.

  • Bad design makes the grinder jam when feeding.
Size: 120v, Type B Plug Color: Matte Black
As a $300 grinder, I wanted to be ecstatic with this product. It should be perfect as a dose grinder. It is not. First, if you are not familiar with the type of grinder this is; it is a "dose" grinder. You weigh or otherwise measure your beans, say 15-30 grams for a pourover or up to maybe 65 grams for a cone filter pot, and pour it in the hopper. Replace the cover to reduce noise. You set the grind size on the dial on the front. The intended operation is that you replace the cover, push a little button on the front and it quietly and quickly grinds the coffee, and detects when all the coffee is fed down and through the blades and stops. There are two problems that I see. One I knew about, the grinder is messy. Specifically, there is a gap between the grounds hopper and the grinder. Some grounds escape. I could put up with that if it was the only problem with the grinder. The second problem is that it has trouble with every dark roast coffee I put into it. If the coffee is roasted enough to develop surface oils, the shallowness of the feed ramp causes the grinder to jam. Because there is no coffee feeding down into the blades, the grinder cuts off. You push in a bit of coffee, restart the grinder, and it grinds a bit then cuts off again. This might happen three times. Once it cuts off during a grind operation, it seems to change the way it works and it will cut off randomly unless it is under no load, in which case it will not cut off until you turn it off. I think this might be intentional. Now even for a light roast, some coffee might get stuck. But this almost always happens for dark roast. I believe that all this results from a stupid design choice. They wanted the grinder to be short and compact, but it also had to have an anti-popcorning shield. Because the feed ramp is short, the gap has to be small to make sure that there is no possibility of fingers, even tiny child fingers, from getting into where the blades are. So, to make the grinder shorter and cuter they saved height by making the feed ramp shallower. This stupid choice is the sort of thing that happens when you don't allow the engineers who are responsible for the function of your product the final decisions as to the required externals. Think of it this way. Suppose there was a very cute car design that was only two feet tall. Should you build it? Or should you make it tall enough for people other who are taller than three standard deviations under the average height to get into it? The rule of design is that form follows function. When form comes first in your design, function is negatively affected. That is the case here. And the grinder therefore jams all the time. The oils on dark roast coffee, even, occasionally the random arrangement of the beans in light roast coffee, cause the beans to jam in the feed ramp. But it looks great in your kitchen. This results in a $300 grinder that not only is only suitable for grinding coffee for pourover or coarser (I knew this when I bought it) and is messy (grinds all over the table) but jams constantly with dark roast and occasionally even with light roast. You have to shake the grinder (huh!) and grind with the cover off, so that you can see feed failures, which makes it noisier. The messiness could be lessened with a different hopper cover that wiped against the bottom of the grinder and touched it during the grind operation. But the problem on the input ramp, well, the only way I see to fix that is to make the grinder taller, so that the feeding works better, and I'm not sure that is possible with just a new part. I have done a taste test with my old grinder, I think the coffee tastes better with this grinder, but the test was not blind. I wanted the coffee to taste better. I had to shake my old grinder occasionally (not as often as with this grinder) but it stayed on until turned off, not until it detected a no load condition. If I had paid $150 for this grinder, I would be a happy puppy. I would accept some problems. But I paid a premium for what I hoped would be a premium product. And it has too many problems for me to give it an unqualified recommendation. If you only grind light roast coffee, maybe, then it only jams with one out of five grinds rather than almost every grind. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on May 11, 2021 by N. J. Simicich

  • MESSY?
Size: 120v, Type B Plug Color: Matte Black
So, I bit the bullet on the Gen 1 because I’m strictly pour over. Read all the reviews and saw all the vids. “Messy” was universally the opinion of most everybody. Hence, I utilized RDT right out of the shoot. Result: could not find a single grain of ground coffee on any part of the machine utilizing RDT. Not ONE! Love this thing! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on February 22, 2023 by Jim Van Vleck

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