Pour Over Coffee Makers

Hario V60 Drip-In Glass Jug Code: VDI-02B

Key features:

  • Glass carafe
  • Capacity: 700 ml
  • Compatible with Hario V60-02 filters
See full description
30 43
31 Coins 31 Coins
Delivery Fri, 10 Jul - Thu, 16 Jul
2,50 € to a Skroutz Point
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From Getters 4.5 (108)
Αχαρνές, Αττικής
1 piece
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Specifications

Specifications

Product Number
VDI-02B
Type
Jug
Material
Glass
Colour
Transparent

Important information

Specifications are collected from official manufacturer websites. Please verify the specifications before proceeding with your final purchase. If you notice any problem you can report it here.

See all specifications

Reviews (1)

Reviews

  1. 1
  2. 4 stars
    0
  3. 3 stars
    0
  4. 2 stars
    0
  5. 1 star
    0
Review this product
  • jasonix
    5
    3 out of 3 members found this review helpful

    The positives (and there are many): Excellent construction; a carafe made of thin glass and a plastic cone, they heat up quickly if you leave them near the kettle while the water is boiling, or with minimal rinsing of the filter. Larger opening than the classic Hario carafe, which uses the same cone, meaning it lathers more easily if you have big hands. Single ring and handle; if your technique requires some rotation, this can be done by holding the carafe either by the handle or by the "neck." As I see it for now, from the handle for greater control, from the neck for stronger movements. The lid comes off and sits back on the carafe whether it hooks onto the handle or not, with or without the cone. Although the carafe is large (it has lines up to 700ml but goes further), the flow of the V60 allows for the most popular techniques to be done the same way from 230 ml (8oz) up to at least half a liter.

    The neutrals: Even though I make coffee with the hottest water possible, I don't think the lid serves any purpose during extraction. The cone is the standard V60, not the Kazuya model (due to the black color I was curious before I received it).

    The negatives: To make 700ml of coffee with a large pour, you need a kettle with the extremely small spout of Hario. With 40 grams of coffee, I do a bloom with 80 grams of water, and then I struggle not to fill it with the rest. I use the white filters in shrink wrap (made in the Netherlands) (update: and the brown filters that came with the carafe), and a Hario Buono 700ml or Belogia KTL 1000ml kettle. I believe with the Buono 1000ml/1200ml I would manage, but I want to see what happens with the flow of filters made in Japan. Under the ring/handle, it collects soap scum that doesn't rinse off. Possibly if it collects some coffee in there, it might stain. Last and probably insignificant, it doesn't look as beautiful as the Chemex-style carafe that Hario produces.

    Update: The not-so-negative: The VCF-02-100W-H filters (number 2) and the slightly smaller brown filters that came as a gift with the carafe are recommended for pouring up to 520 ml of water, as is the cone that comes with the carafe. For more, you need VCF-03 filters (and theoretically, the corresponding cone), unless you use a 2+3 pouring recipe like Kazuya's.

    Update 2: With the filters in the loose transparent plastic packaging, I comfortably go over 600ml. I just switched back to shrink wrap and remembered it.

    Translated from Greek ·
    Did you find this review helpful?
  • The positives (and there are many): Excellent construction; a carafe made of thin glass and a plastic cone, they heat up quickly if you leave them near the kettle while the water is boiling, or with minimal rinsing of the filter. Larger opening than the classic Hario carafe, which uses the same cone, meaning it lathers more easily if you have big hands. Single ring and handle; if your technique requires some rotation, this can be done by holding the carafe either by the handle or by the "neck." As I see it for now, from the handle for greater control, from the neck for stronger movements. The lid comes off and sits back on the carafe whether it hooks onto the handle or not, with or without the cone. Although the carafe is large (it has lines up to 700ml but goes further), the flow of the V60 allows for the most popular techniques to be done the same way from 230 ml (8oz) up to at least half a liter.

    The neutrals: Even though I make coffee with the hottest water possible, I don't think the lid serves any purpose during extraction. The cone is the standard V60, not the Kazuya model (due to the black color I was curious before I received it).

    The negatives: To make 700ml of coffee with a large pour, you need a kettle with the extremely small spout of Hario. With 40 grams of coffee, I do a bloom with 80 grams of water, and then I struggle not to fill it with the rest. I use the white filters in shrink wrap (made in the Netherlands) (update: and the brown filters that came with the carafe), and a Hario Buono 700ml or Belogia KTL 1000ml kettle. I believe with the Buono 1000ml/1200ml I would manage, but I want to see what happens with the flow of filters made in Japan. Under the ring/handle, it collects soap scum that doesn't rinse off. Possibly if it collects some coffee in there, it might stain. Last and probably insignificant, it doesn't look as beautiful as the Chemex-style carafe that Hario produces.

    Update: The not-so-negative: The VCF-02-100W-H filters (number 2) and the slightly smaller brown filters that came as a gift with the carafe are recommended for pouring up to 520 ml of water, as is the cone that comes with the carafe. For more, you need VCF-03 filters (and theoretically, the corresponding cone), unless you use a 2+3 pouring recipe like Kazuya's.

    Update 2: With the filters in the loose transparent plastic packaging, I comfortably go over 600ml. I just switched back to shrink wrap and remembered it.

    Translated from Greek ·
    3
  • See all
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Specifications

Product Number
VDI-02B
Type
Jug
Material
Glass
Colour
Transparent

Important information

Specifications are collected from official manufacturer websites. Please verify the specifications before proceeding with your final purchase. If you notice any problem you can report it here.

Reviews (1)

  1. 1
  2. 4 stars
    0
  3. 3 stars
    0
  4. 2 stars
    0
  5. 1 star
    0
Review this product
  • jasonix
    5
    3 out of 3 members found this review helpful

    The positives (and there are many): Excellent construction; a carafe made of thin glass and a plastic cone, they heat up quickly if you leave them near the kettle while the water is boiling, or with minimal rinsing of the filter. Larger opening than the classic Hario carafe, which uses the same cone, meaning it lathers more easily if you have big hands. Single ring and handle; if your technique requires some rotation, this can be done by holding the carafe either by the handle or by the "neck." As I see it for now, from the handle for greater control, from the neck for stronger movements. The lid comes off and sits back on the carafe whether it hooks onto the handle or not, with or without the cone. Although the carafe is large (it has lines up to 700ml but goes further), the flow of the V60 allows for the most popular techniques to be done the same way from 230 ml (8oz) up to at least half a liter.

    The neutrals: Even though I make coffee with the hottest water possible, I don't think the lid serves any purpose during extraction. The cone is the standard V60, not the Kazuya model (due to the black color I was curious before I received it).

    The negatives: To make 700ml of coffee with a large pour, you need a kettle with the extremely small spout of Hario. With 40 grams of coffee, I do a bloom with 80 grams of water, and then I struggle not to fill it with the rest. I use the white filters in shrink wrap (made in the Netherlands) (update: and the brown filters that came with the carafe), and a Hario Buono 700ml or Belogia KTL 1000ml kettle. I believe with the Buono 1000ml/1200ml I would manage, but I want to see what happens with the flow of filters made in Japan. Under the ring/handle, it collects soap scum that doesn't rinse off. Possibly if it collects some coffee in there, it might stain. Last and probably insignificant, it doesn't look as beautiful as the Chemex-style carafe that Hario produces.

    Update: The not-so-negative: The VCF-02-100W-H filters (number 2) and the slightly smaller brown filters that came as a gift with the carafe are recommended for pouring up to 520 ml of water, as is the cone that comes with the carafe. For more, you need VCF-03 filters (and theoretically, the corresponding cone), unless you use a 2+3 pouring recipe like Kazuya's.

    Update 2: With the filters in the loose transparent plastic packaging, I comfortably go over 600ml. I just switched back to shrink wrap and remembered it.

    Translated from Greek ·
    Did you find this review helpful?
  • The positives (and there are many): Excellent construction; a carafe made of thin glass and a plastic cone, they heat up quickly if you leave them near the kettle while the water is boiling, or with minimal rinsing of the filter. Larger opening than the classic Hario carafe, which uses the same cone, meaning it lathers more easily if you have big hands. Single ring and handle; if your technique requires some rotation, this can be done by holding the carafe either by the handle or by the "neck." As I see it for now, from the handle for greater control, from the neck for stronger movements. The lid comes off and sits back on the carafe whether it hooks onto the handle or not, with or without the cone. Although the carafe is large (it has lines up to 700ml but goes further), the flow of the V60 allows for the most popular techniques to be done the same way from 230 ml (8oz) up to at least half a liter.

    The neutrals: Even though I make coffee with the hottest water possible, I don't think the lid serves any purpose during extraction. The cone is the standard V60, not the Kazuya model (due to the black color I was curious before I received it).

    The negatives: To make 700ml of coffee with a large pour, you need a kettle with the extremely small spout of Hario. With 40 grams of coffee, I do a bloom with 80 grams of water, and then I struggle not to fill it with the rest. I use the white filters in shrink wrap (made in the Netherlands) (update: and the brown filters that came with the carafe), and a Hario Buono 700ml or Belogia KTL 1000ml kettle. I believe with the Buono 1000ml/1200ml I would manage, but I want to see what happens with the flow of filters made in Japan. Under the ring/handle, it collects soap scum that doesn't rinse off. Possibly if it collects some coffee in there, it might stain. Last and probably insignificant, it doesn't look as beautiful as the Chemex-style carafe that Hario produces.

    Update: The not-so-negative: The VCF-02-100W-H filters (number 2) and the slightly smaller brown filters that came as a gift with the carafe are recommended for pouring up to 520 ml of water, as is the cone that comes with the carafe. For more, you need VCF-03 filters (and theoretically, the corresponding cone), unless you use a 2+3 pouring recipe like Kazuya's.

    Update 2: With the filters in the loose transparent plastic packaging, I comfortably go over 600ml. I just switched back to shrink wrap and remembered it.

    Translated from Greek ·
    3
  • See all
30,43 €
2,50 € to a Skroutz Point