I’ve seen the Eiffel, I’ve seen an eyeful, and now I’ve seen a robot do a pour-over.
The single-cup pour-over is, of course, craft coffee’s most romantic art—a showcase for patience and artistry and maybe even reverence.
The famously slow brewing technique—essentially a precise and protracted pouring of hot water over fresh-ground coffee, to coax the most delicate flavors from a bean—is also maybe the last space reserved for humans in a coffee world increasingly filled with expensive machines. The pour-over is a coffee nerd’s version of a priestly rite. The effort is half the point.
And so the xBloom Studio looked almost like a gimmick when it began to appear on social media ads this year. At its heart, the machine is an infinitely programmable robot that’ll do a pour-over for you—a machine that precisely mimics the all-too-human actions of pouring a thin stream of scalding water in a circle above a filtered coffee receptacle, frowning for a while, and then pouring again.
The xBloom is a premium coffee brewer reimagined by and maybe for the San Francisco tech set: a slick and multitiered iPhone of a thing founded by veterans of Apple’s project design team. But it’s no gimmick, it turns out. It is an innovative, often impressive, and just as often maddening device whose promise is no less than infinite optimization, the perfect cup for every bean.
Of course, it requires a phone app.
Countless Customizations
Last year's first-generation device from xBloom felt like more of a novelty. The new Studio both costs less and is far more ambitious than the Original. The Studio is an all-in-one coffee brewer with a built-in scale and a high-end, 120-rpm burr grinder that would likely cost about $200 on its own.
Pair xBloom's phone app to the device—or swipe an RFID recipe card that might arrive with your bag of beans—and you can program or upload a dizzying array of preferences, personalized perhaps to each single-estate Colombian or Indonesian bean.
The xBloom will grind your beans to comically specific fineness or coarseness. It will pour flash-heated and lightly agitated water in circles or spirals or right down the middle according to your narrowest specifications, in a process as Rube Goldberg–transparent and tangible as those see-through orange juicers one sometimes finds at supermarkets.
“I’m shocked. This is a solid cup of coffee,” said longtime coffee pro Adam Gery, co-owner of esteemed South Philly shop Two Persons Coffee, after drinking a cup made by the device.