The Apex of High-End Grinding Technology The Lagom 01 represents a significant moment in the trajectory of the "endgame" coffee grinder. Manufactured by Option O, this machine has already secured its place in the industry as the official grinder for the 2026 World Brewers Cup Championship. It arrives with a $3,000 price tag, placing it squarely in the territory of luxury high-performance tools. The question for any enthusiast at this price point is simple: what does that extra investment actually buy? At this level, we are deep into the territory of diminishing returns. You can unlock 80% of a coffee's potential with a grinder that costs a fraction of this amount. The Lagom 01 is designed for the remaining 20%—the micro-adjustments, the extreme clarity, and the specific textural nuances that only massive burr sets can provide. Industrial Design Meets Pragmatic Customization Visually, the Lagom 01 follows the established design language of its predecessors, the P100 and P80. It is a "chunky" machine, dominated by its cylindrical form and a massive brushless DC motor. One notable critique of the stock design is the open hopper, which invites dust accumulation. This has led some users to seek third-party modifications, such as woodworking caps from Five Ounce Design or custom leather base plates from artisans like Robert Asami. The interface is tactile and deliberate. The hopper and grind dial are integrated into a single threaded unit that offers stepless adjustment. While the movement is slick and lacks the metal-on-metal friction found in cheaper units, it requires a surprising amount of torque to turn. Functionality is prioritized through a dual-button system on the side: one for standard operation and another for a high-RPM purge. This purge feature, combined with a mechanical knocker that jars the exit chute, is essential for minimizing retention in a horizontally mounted system. Engineering Choices and the Horizontal Debate Peeling back the exterior reveals a machine built with obsessive tolerances. The burr carrier is secured by thumb screws, a design shift from earlier threaded versions that prioritizes convenience over absolute rigidity. While this change introduces a tiny amount of flexion, the alignment remains world-class. The unit features a Japanese-made bearing and a newly added auger feeding mechanism. This auger is intended to feed beans into the burrs at a constant rate rather than a single "full dump," which theoretically improves grind consistency. However, the Lagom 01 remains a horizontally mounted grinder. This design choice is a point of contention for those who argue that vertical burrs are superior for filter coffee because they allow grounds to exit the chamber faster. In a horizontal setup, coffee stays in the chamber slightly longer, potentially affecting taste through heat buildup or re-grinding. Despite this, the throughput of the 102mm burrs is so high that the impact is minimized, though a tilted assembly would likely have been the engineering "holy grail" for this platform. Mapping the 102mm Burr Landscape The real soul of the Lagom 01 lies in its burr options, specifically the 102mm blind burrs. While the machine can be fitted with a carrier for 98mm burrs, doing so ignores the primary advantage of the 01's scale. The Misen Burrs These are Option O's in-house offerings. They are reliable all-rounders that provide a balanced cup with decent clarity and body. However, for a $3,000 investment, they lack a truly unique signature. They produce a flavor profile that is largely obtainable on much cheaper 64mm or 80mm platforms. The SSP Brew Version 2 For those chasing high-clarity filter coffee, the Brew Version 2 burrs with Silver Knight coating are spectacular. They offer a tea-like body and exceptional flavor separation. Interestingly, they require significant seasoning—roughly 50 to 60 pounds of coffee—before they truly unlock their potential. They provide a clinical presentation without being hollow, though they are prone to trapping small coffee fragments in their sharp ridges. The SSP High Uniformity (HU) These 102mm HU burrs are arguably the premier choice for the light roast aficionado. They are the most well-rounded burrs available, excelling at both modern espresso and high-end filter brews. They provide a level of flexibility that is rare in the niche world of large-format burrs, offering sweetness, body, and clarity in equal measure. If a user is only going to own one high-end grinder and one burr set, the Lagom 01 with HU burrs is the definitive recommendation. Verdict: Luxury Performance for the Few The Lagom 01 is a triumph of industrial engineering, but it is not a necessity for the average home brewer. Its performance is world-class, yet it serves a very specific niche of users who are willing to pay for the last 5% of flavor extraction. The retention is impressively low—averaging around 0.1g—and the variable RPM (ranging from roughly 200 to 1,800) allows for deep experimentation with grind physics. Ultimately, no amount of gear can compensate for mediocre beans. A Lagom 01 will make great coffee taste slightly better, but it will not fix supermarket beans. For the enthusiast who already sources the finest light roasts and wants a reliable, versatile, and aesthetically striking tool to explore them, the Lagom 01 is an exceptional choice. For everyone else, a mid-range grinder like a Zerno or a high-quality 64mm unit provides much better value without sacrificing the joy of a good cup.
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- 5 hours ago
- Apr 10, 2025