☕ Brew in Style: Elevate your coffee game with Le Creuset!
The Le Creuset Stoneware French Press in Artichaut is a 34 oz. premium coffee maker designed for everyday use. Its colorful, nonporous glaze is resistant to chips, scratches, and stains, while the virtually nonstick surface ensures easy cleanup. With superior heat retention, this French press keeps your beverages warm or cold, and it's safe for use in the freezer, oven, microwave, broiler, and dishwasher.
Exterior Finish | Stoneware |
Material | Stoneware |
Item Weight | 34 Ounces |
Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
Number of Items | 1 |
Capacity | 2.1 Pounds |
Style | french |
Color | Artichaut |
Operation Mode | Manual |
Human Interface Input | Buttons |
Filter Type | Reusable |
Specific Uses For Product | Ground Coffee, home |
Special Features | Thermal |
Coffee Maker Type | French Press |
F**K
Aesthetically pleasing to hold and to look at. It also makes good coffee.
This is my go-to coffee maker.I had been mostly indifferent to coffee, and then I was suddenly converted. I've been a dedicated daily coffee drinker for thirty years since I first visited Italy. Coffee bars in every Italian city or town I came upon were nearly everywhere, and most delivered coffee with taste that varied only from excellent to superb.Since then I've yet to find an American coffee shop that regularly brews at that high level. At home, I've been trying to reproduce the delightful Italian taste (with allowances for my homey, less exotic atmosphere), but failed. I worked at it. I bought a wide variety of custom-roasted beans, an excellent coffee grinder, and two well-reviewed, expensive Italian espresso machines. After much research, years of experimentation, a second trip to Italy where I was able to consult with a friendly, talented barista, I was able to come close to that delightful Italian taste in my kitchen, but I couldn't quite match it.I have no doubt that there are many non-professional, talented people around the world who can make splendorous coffee at home. I wish that I were one of those.My elegant espresso machines made very good coffee, but not good enough to justify the effort of my endeavor. By "effort" I'm not referring to my research, my experimentation with techniques and grinds (that part was interesting), or the cost of the ridiculously expensive machines. Rather, I mean that the espresso machines were fussy, often required readjustments, and were difficult to clean.I bought and used several electric drip machines, a Nespresso unit, and and two well-rated European models. I have have tried multiple non-electric devices including pour types, stove-tops brewers, and infusion coffee makers. In the end I switched to coffee press machines. Carefully done, presses make excellent (yet not superb) coffee.Over years I tried many different brands of presses, including Melior, which may be the original, hand-crafted, French-made model. (Melior was bought by Bodum,. That company now makes a similar model, although without a craftsman's small details.) I've tried glass presses, a few double-walled stainless machines (a weld on the priciest Frieling model broke after a few months), and porcelain and stoneware versions.I am now settled in with this le Creuset model. It's pleasant to look at, feels good in to hold in my hand, is comfortable to use, and is not difficult to clean. I love the color I chose. The parts fit together well; it doesn't leak or rattle. This device makes consistently good - although still not barista-quality - coffee.I prefer stoneware for presses over alternative materials. It keeps the coffee sufficiently hot with no need for a cozy. The outside gets pleasantly warm to the touch soon after the hot water pour, but it doesn't burn my fingers. I've found that glass and porcelain release heat faster and get hotter on the outside. And beond protecting a user from burnt fingers, there is no need to use an insulated press, made from steel or otherwise. Leaving coffee in a press for more than about five minutes just to keep it warm ends with grounds producing an over-extracted, bitter brew.This le Crueset isn't perfect. I even considered rating this model with four stars, but it makes no sense to be nit-picky about a press that I've re-purchased a few times over fifteen years after I accidentally broke one.That thought leads me to my biggest criticism of this model. The steel shaft of the press goes through an opening in the stoneware lid. The shaft is tightened with a small steel nut on the inside of the lid and a threaded steel knob on the top. The threading is a reasonable solution, and the knob will never break off the shaft like my welded Frieling did. However, the shaft mustn't be screwed too tightly because it might damage the breakable lid.That's how one of my le Creuset presses was finished off; the the knob became loose and I didn't notice. The lid slipped away and hit the hard floor. I don't consider that particular breakage to be one of my accidents.The threaded knob is an imperfect, but perhaps necessary, design compromise. I've tried carefully tightening the knob with a wrench, yet even that strong connection eventually loosened. I might, sometime, try tightening the knob further, but I'm wary of breaking the lid. Now, once in a while, I check that the shaft connection to the knob is finger-tight. The extra bit of effort is a small nuisance, but not enough to put me off this good press.So, after considering many alternative ways to brew, I am content with le Creuset.
S**R
Great but do not order as used from the Amazon Warehouse
Sadly, the Frnech Press I got from Amazon arrived with its ceramic pitcher broken into two pieces. I don't know if it was broken when it was shipped from the warehouse, or whether it was broken during shipping and handling. Won't ever know. I do know that Amazon did not package this properly. Something like this must have its box shipped within another box and there be padding, such as bubble wrap. Instead, probably because this was an Amazon Warehouse item (= used), Amazon did not package it as fragile, so by the time I got, the main ceramic pitcher was broken in two.I ordered again as used, and the next product was also shipped without any protection. It arrived unbroken but had a product flaw in the ceramic. I returned it but only after putting this box into a padded box so it would not arrive at Amazon broken.Morale of the story: Amazon seems to ship used fragile ceramics in an unprotected fashion that makes these items much more likely to arrive broken, or to break if you send them back the same way. It shocks me quite a bit that Amazon would do this.So I would NOT order fragile used stoneware from the Amazon Warehouse.So the one I got from Amazon was garbage, and I returned it; however, my eldest daughter has this exact same French Press and it works beautifully. I've used it many times, and it makes great coffee and is easy to clean.May still order again, but will only order NEW!
F**K
A Fantastic Pour-Over Brewer Also!
I am not a fan of French Press coffee. I made it for many years early in my coffee journey of the past 50 years. It takes lots of concentration and timing to get it just right. Then it's great. But the French Press brew method creates a two huge problems: 1. It uses far too much coffee for the same coffee flavor due to the coarse grind size. 2. It puts coffee grounds in your drinking coffee then tries to remove them with the strainer screen at the bottom. Wrong! If you keep the coffee grounds above the coffee pot in a filter and pour the brew water through them, you eliminate the nasty problem of grounds and foam in your coffee. In the process you make that same fantastic cup of gourmet coffee. Here's how: 1. Remove that lovely stoneware lid and strainer and set them aside. Place your favorite brew cone or filter holder on the top of the open Le Creuset pot. Add your ground coffee and brew to your preferred strength and flavor. Replace the stoneware lid and strainer. Take your beautiful Le Creuset coffee pot to the table and pour your coffee. I can guarantee you will not have one coffee ground in your cup of perfect coffee. You also get to admire your lovely Le Creuset French Press coffee pot on your table. Excellent! This is the only way I make coffee now. It's so good, I just got my second Le Creuset French Press. Great coffee every time!
G**S
Makes coffee making better
I used to have the transparent glass one but this put a different touch in my kitchen. Adds class , more aesthetic in the eye.plus this is bigger than the usual press.
K**D
Dishwasher safe
It’s great! Maintains the heat and the flavor of coffee is amazing
Trustpilot
4 days ago
1 month ago