French Press & Co
The Studio Pour-Over Set
The Studio Pour-Over Set
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Porcelain dripper · 600 ml · Three colors · Made for paper filters
Porcelain holds the heat without giving it away. Drop in the paper, level the grounds, pour in three pulses. Coffee comes out clean and bright on the bottom side.
The Bench Pour-Over Set is a porcelain ceramic coffee dripper sized at 600 ml. The cone shape with a single drain hole guides the water through evenly, paired with standard paper filters for the cleanest cup pour-over offers.
Bright, clean, the bean speaks.
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Specifications
Brew ratios
We brew at 1:16 by weight for paper-filtered pour-over, the cleanest extraction profile. Medium-fine grind, three pulses over three to four minutes.
Water temperature: 92 to 96 °C · 198 to 205 °F. Just off the boil.
Care & maintenance
Porcelain washes clean and shows nothing. A simple rinse and dry is all it asks.
- Pre-warm: A quick rinse with hot water before brewing keeps the brew temperature even.
- After each brew: Discard the paper filter and grounds, rinse the dripper.
- Wash: Mild soap and a soft sponge. Dishwasher safe in most cases.
- Color care: Avoid abrasives, especially on the matte finishes.
Frequently asked
Which paper filter fits?
Cone-shaped #02 size, the most common size for home pour-overs. Bleached or unbleached both work. Rinse the paper before use to remove any paper taste.
Does it have one or several holes at the bottom?
A single drain hole. The water resistance comes from the paper filter and the grind density, which gives the brewer more control over flow than multi-hole drippers.
How is it different from the Studio or Atelier pour-over?
The Bench is a stand-alone dripper, no integrated server below. Use it directly on top of your favorite mug or carafe. The Studio and Atelier sets include a matched carafe.
What grind?
Medium-fine, like sea salt. Finer than French press, coarser than espresso. The grounds should resist the water enough to brew over three to four minutes.
Why three colors?
White is the canvas, classic and clean. Brown reads warm and earthy. Blue is calm, deep. Same body, same brewing performance.
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