• Reviews around bean (2.00 of 5)

    Solofill SOLOGRIND 2-in-1 Automatic Single Serve Coffee Burr Grinder for Coffee Pod,Black,1 EA

    • When I wake up, I press grind (no 2 setting), it fills my kcup cleanly, and I brew away with fresh ground beans.
    • Going back to the drip machine days, I have always ground my own beans.
    • so I needed a quick way to grind the beans and happened upon this little gem.
    • so I shut it off and shook the beans, made it more coarse in attempt to get the beans out that were stuck
    • I then tride to grind some more beans and transfer them by hand.
    • It works ok but doesn't going the coffee beans fine enough
    • If you own a Keurig brewer but still prefer grinding your own beans, buy this.
    • I love grinding my own beans and up to
    • The directions could be clearer but it is worth the money if you want to grind your own fresh coffee beans.
    • Coffee tastes better when the beans are freshly ground and it smells great!
    • The only thing missing from a perfect cup of coffee from my keurig was fresh ground beans
    • I hate that there seems to be a powder or residue that builds up within the clear plastic chute that slowly clogs it and wastes beans over time.
    • You can choose your own beans to grind and
    • Especially that depending on the bean different grind setting and time may be required.
    • When you grind coffee beans, there will be spillage and stuff to clean up afterwards
    • I had been wanting to try to grind my own beans but all of the grinders are setup to grind at least 3 cups worth at
    • It take me some 10 seconds to get freshly ground beans in to a K-Cup
    • Just fill the hopper with your favorite coffee beans, insert the Solofill cup (also highly recommended) into the machine and press the button.
    • The only thing missing from a perfect cup of coffee from my keurig was fresh ground beans
    • fine enough).I have always ground my own beans right before brewing as that gives the best flavor.
    • I use to use a Delfino grinder to grind my beans for my Keurig machine until the cap broke and could no longer operate
    • The directions could be clearer but it is worth the money if you want to grind your own fresh coffee beans.
    • If you use the Keurig, this is probably the best option if you want to grind beans
    • In my experience, there are a lot of variables that seem to affect the grind amount - oiliness of the beans, temperature of the beans (fresh from the freezer or not), amount of beans in the hopper, and of course, fineness of the grind
    • I could use my old blade grinder, grind my beans, and have a mug of fresh cofffee in less than 2 minutes
    • I wasted coffee beans, because I had more coffee spray out from the grinder than went into the container
    • Anyway, took it out of the box, got it all set up and added some fresh beans
    • I ran my beans through over 5 times on the fine setting and it still wasn't ground
    • I am enjoying coffee made from freshly ground beans.
    • I would have to measure out the beans with a reusable Keurig cup then grind the beans and then pour the grind back into the reusable cup etc
    • When I grind dark-roast Peet's beans, I have to clean out the ground coffee shoot regularly because the extra surface oils on dark roasts stick together and clog the chute
    • I like the fact that I can grind the coffee bean right into a reusable filter whenever I want a fresh brew.
    • This seems to solve that problem so I decided to buy this at Bed Bath & Beyond because it fills the Keurig cup and also has a container for grinding enough beans for a drip coffee maker
    • Getting really good, fresh beans ground just before brewing makes all the difference
    • I have ground beans every morning for many years and of the fun in getting a new grinder is experimenting to get the right grind for said bean.
    • If you are using a good bean the coffee taste wonderful and a pound of beans from Starbucks is lasting me at least 4 times as long (so far, its not gone yet) as the box of K-Cups they sell and the beans are only 2$ more
    • We get to enjoy our favorite whole bean coffee without buying pods!(It can be a little messy when you grind, so I wrap a paper plate around the front so the ultra fine coffee "dust" won't get on the counter
    • I bought the grinder in March 2014 and so far the worst problem I have encountered is that my local grocery store doesn't stock enough of my favorite coffee beans.
    • Does a great job of grinding coffee beans.
    • So I read the reviews about pressing the "STOP" button after so many seconds (e.g. count "one thousand 1, one thousand 2, one thousand 3" and then press "STOP"), and that DID work, but who wants to stand by the machine counting every time they want to grind beans for one cup of coffee?
    • The unit breaks the beans up into a mixture of boulders and fine dust, neither of which are useful to me.
    • and it does a fair job of grinding beans, it just can't keep them in Vue Basket, they cover the counter where the unit sits
    • I find that anything under a "B" grind (more fine) tends to have too much residue in the coffee and anything greater than "C" (more coarse) doesn't have as much flavor
    • I find that anything under a "B" grind (more fine) tends to have too much residue in the coffee and anything greater than "C" (more coarse) doesn't have as much flavor
    • While this works, it sure would be nice if the machine worked as it's supposed to.
    • That's a solid A in my book