One of the best investments you can make to level up your morning coffee — regardless of how you brew it — is to add a digital scale to your coffee preparation. For years I started my days grinding a handful of beans and sloshing an indeterminate amount of boiling water through them, and the results were… fine. Is “fine” really the goal when it comes to your daily caffeine-delivery ritual?
Achieving good coffee is all about the consistent combination of quality beans (ground well), hot water and time. A quality coffee scale ties them all together, measuring the beans before and after grinding, measuring the amount of water added and extracting the coffee over a set amount of time.
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The MHW-3Bomber Cube Coffee Scale Mini 2.0 does it all in a compact, affordable package — $45 — with features tailored for coffee and espresso preparation. Even better, you can save 15% with an Amazon coupon for Labor Day It recharges via USB-C cable and takes up nearly no space on your counter. The best part is you don’t need to dive deep into the intricacies of professional coffee brewing to gain the advantages a scale provides.
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Let gravity get you started
Aside from the obvious capability of giving a precise measurement of whatever you put on top of the scale, what I like about the Cube Coffee Scale Mini 2.0 is how convenient it is for me.
As long as the scale is powered on (via a physical switch, which I almost never again need to touch), it sleeps near my other coffee gear. When I put anything weighing over 100g on top, such as a small container to pour beans into, the scale wakes up and zeroes the measurement — most scales require that I add the container and then reset the amount before adding the beans.
Smart modes for pour-over and espresso
The Cube Coffee Scale Mini 2.0 also features smart modes for the preparation of pour-over coffee and espresso. For example, with grounds all set in a pour-over cone, as soon as I start pouring water the scale begins recording the weight and starts the timer. When the brew finishes, the bright LCD displays the original weight of the grinds and the water weight plus the elapsed time.
When using it with an espresso machine, the scale is small enough to fit under most groupheads. This smart mode records the weight of the coffee in the portafilter — the silicon mat flips over to make this easier to balance — and then records the weight of the extracted espresso so you can dial in a good ratio of beans to liquid.
True to its name, the MHW-3Bomber Coffee Scale Mini 2.0 has a small footprint, which is great if the coffee corner in your kitchen is dense with gear. It’s best suited to smaller, single coffee batches, but I’ve successfully used it with an 8-cup pour-over coffee maker that I brew with most mornings.
Measuring my coffee beans and water has proven to be a revelation in my coffee prep. When an older, larger scale I’d used for years finally weighed its last grounds, I was buzzing with excitement to get a smaller, slightly smarter model — or maybe that was the caffeine coursing through me.
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