Coffee nerd or not, you’ve probably heard of — or at least seen — a Fellow product before: think the Stagg EKG Electric Kettle, Stagg EKG Pro Electric Kettle, Ode Grinder 1 or Ode Grinder 2. They’re in every coffee snob’s kitchen, whether they regularly use them or not. And, as they sung the brand’s praises, plenty of at-home aficionados followed suit. Now, it seems, Fellow is everywhere.
But for good reason. So far, Fellow has no true misses. Sure, there were problems with the original Ode Grinder, but Fellow addressed them and launched a new gen model, the Ode Grinder 2. Neither version accommodated espresso, though, which calls for much finer grounds than pour-over or French press coffee. In fact, the company explicitly deterred owners from trying to use the grounds either model produced for espresso drinks.

Now, though, an entirely new model aims to be all-in-one, unlike the last two: the Fellow Opus Grinder. It’s cheaper, too, thanks to a plastic body and its six-blade 40mm conical burr setup, which proves cheaper to manufacture than 64mm flat burrs. As such, the Opus is capable of coarser grinds for cold brew all the way to ultra-fine grinds for Turkish coffee. So, is the Opus an Ode replacement or better positioned alongside? We found out.
The Fellow Opus Grinder

Fellow Opus Grinder
Pros
- Conical burr system allows for finer grinds than the standard flat burrs in the Ode Grinder and Ode Grinder 2
- Far cheaper than the earlier models
- Intuitive features like the visual grind guide and lid doser help coffee newbies learn fast
- It looks like a Fellow product, which is definitely a compliment
Cons
- This model uses plastic, not aluminum for its body
- The button placement still results in accidental messes
- There should be a portafilter holder, but there isn't — why not?!