Browse various specialty and craft coffee Instagram accounts for more than 5 minutes and there’s a pretty good chance you’ll run into one of Fellow’s line of Stagg water kettles. It makes sense for Instagram — it is beautiful, reflects light softly and shows that, yes, even something as traditionally banal as a water kettle must look the part.
But the Stagg kettles aren’t boring, no, quite the opposite — they look like the product of some wormhole collaboration between Sith lords and Muji’s design team. And they’re packed with function, too. Virtually every competition brewer, café owner and specialty coffee big wig know what they are, and there was near-ubiquitous praise for it. We got our hands on the Stagg EKG kettle to test, compare and see if we could figure if a kettle could warrant the price of a solid home grinder, or a dozen bags of coffee.
The Good: The point is worth belaboring — the Stagg EKG looks dope. The matte black body with a mirror stainless steel interior is further elevated by the soft glow of the digital display. It’s quite easy to use as well; one knob and two small switches handle all functions from adjusting desire temperature, changing from Celsius to Fahrenheit, initiating temperature holding mode (up to 60 minutes) and the built-in brew timer.
From a performance angle, the kettle is quite fast at bringing water to that desired temperature (significantly faster than its competition). The lid fits snugly without being sticky or difficult to remove, and the handle, though strange, fits into the handle well. The gooseneck pour is smooth, slow and precise.
Who It’s For: A $150 electric kettle is not for the Keurig owner, the French press owner or perhaps even some pour over brewers. It’s for the intrepid home coffee maker who gets satisfaction from a product that nails looks and performance. A slightly more specific note — I’d recommend it far more for pour over brewers using smaller brewing mechanisms, namely V60s or Kalita Waves, as the pour is fairly slow, which made brewing a large batch on a Chemex tedious.
Watch Out For: The Stagg EKG is $150 when most of its competition is nearly $100 less. Though it’s packed with functionality, not much of it is truly groundbreaking. It does the same things that other electric kettles do, only better. Apart from this, the handle, though it fits in the hand nicely, could’ve used some love, material-wise — it’s a sort of chintzy plastic that feels like it should’ve been rubber (or another heat dissipating material). Another small issue with the handle arises from the tiny stainless steel ring that connects it to the kettle, which gets quite hot during brewing and is easily scraped over.