$24.00
I'd never seen a pocket scale until I was in Panama several years ago buying Gesha coffees, and they whipped one out to measure coffee beans. I was sold, and as soon as I got home I went on the hunt for the perfect one. I've tested out a bunch at this point, and this is my favorite.
First of all, it's accurate, precise, and quick. It weighs up to 1,000 grams, which is plenty when you're on the road making a pourover. It also registers one decimal place, even under one gram - so it's great for weighing loose leaf tea. It has a back-lit screen that's easy to read, even for these old eyes. I like this model because it has a flip-top lid that protects the scale in your bag, but stays attached so you don't lose it. But if your brewing receptacle is too big for the stainless weighing platform or if you're weighing things that tend to wander off, the lid easily snaps off its hinges for use as an expansion tray. No more guessing when you're away from home. This is a cool scale. (It weighs in grams, ounces, troy ounces, pennyweights, carats, and grains, in case you measure your coffee beans by the carat and your water by the troy ounce...)
$23.50
I've used many different pourover setups, and even made my own, working on theories in my head that tell me coffee should be brewed a certain way. But it keeps coming back here. The Hario V60 is designed in such...
$58.50
I've tested out many scales over the past couple years, and this is the scale that I use at home every morning when I make coffee. The reason is that this scale does exactly what I want it to without...