Coffee Kettle Guide: Gooseneck, PID, Variable Temperature

By Lorenzo · Published 20 April 2026 · Silo S7 — Coffee Equipment · Reading time: 7 min

If you are just getting into pour-over coffee — V60, Chemex, AeroPress, Kalita Wave — the kettle is the piece of equipment you will interact with most directly. It is the physical link between you and the extraction. How fast the water flows, how precisely you can direct it, and whether it arrives at the right temperature: these three things determine the outcome of every brew. This guide explains gooseneck spouts, variable temperature, PID precision, and how to choose the right kettle for your setup and budget.

Two non-negotiables — 1/ A gooseneck spout for controlled, directed flow. 2/ A way to know and hold your target temperature (thermometer or built-in variable temperature). Everything else is comfort and aesthetics.

Why the gooseneck spout matters

A gooseneck is a long, narrow, S-curved spout that gives you precise control over the flow rate and direction of water. Standard kettles pour in a wide, fast, difficult-to-direct stream. For pour-over brewing, that lack of control is a serious problem: you need to pour in slow, even spirals over the coffee bed, and you need to start with a slow trickle during the bloom phase.

With a gooseneck spout, you control the flow by tilting the kettle. Tilt more: faster flow. Tilt less: slow trickle. The narrow spout also means you can direct the water exactly where you want it — over the centre, in circular spirals, anywhere on the coffee bed — without splashing the sides of the filter. For serious pour-over, a gooseneck is not optional. It is the minimum equipment requirement for consistent, controllable extraction.

Temperature: why brewing at 100 °C is usually wrong

Water temperature directly affects extraction. As a starting guide for specialty coffee:

Boiling water (100 °C) over-extracts light roasts and amplifies the bitter notes in dark roasts. A standard kettle boils and stops — to get 93 °C, you have to wait for it to cool, with no way of knowing exactly when it has reached the right temperature. A standalone thermometer solves this at low cost. A variable temperature kettle lets you dial in the exact temperature before brewing and hold it there until you pour.

Variable temperature and PID: levels of precision

Variable temperature kettles heat to a user-set target (say, 93 °C) rather than always boiling to 100 °C. Better models also hold the temperature steady for 30–60 minutes after reaching the target. The most precise versions include a PID controller, which maintains temperature within ±0.5 °C throughout the session — not just at the moment of boiling, but continuously. For daily pour-over brewing, variable temperature with hold is a genuine quality-of-life improvement. You set the temperature, the kettle handles it, and you focus on the pour.

Materials: stainless steel, copper, glass

Material Advantages Limitations Best for
Stainless steel Durable, taste-neutral, easy to clean, excellent value Heavier than glass or titanium Most home users — the default choice
Copper Excellent heat conductor, beautiful aesthetic, works on gas flame Requires polishing, expensive, can develop taste if poorly maintained Design enthusiasts, stovetop on gas
Borosilicate glass Visually beautiful, absolutely taste-neutral, visible water level Fragile, no thermal retention, limited induction compatibility Aesthetic display, occasional use
Titanium Very light, extremely durable, completely taste-neutral High price, very limited market availability Travellers, ultralight enthusiasts

Kettle comparison by budget

Model Type Variable temp Hold function Capacity Price Best feature
Hario V60 Buono Stovetop, stainless No (use thermometer) No 0.8 L ~€45 Perfect entry-level spout
Timemore Fish Smart Electric, stainless Yes Yes 0.8 L ~€100 Lightweight, excellent spout
Brewista Artisan Electric, stainless Yes Yes 1.0 L ~€130 Large capacity, good value
Fellow Stagg EKG Electric, stainless Yes (±0.5 °C) 60 min 0.9 L ~€170 Iconic design, PID precision, timer
Fellow Stagg EKG Pro Electric, stainless Yes (±0.5 °C) 60 min 0.9 L ~€220 Bluetooth, advanced timer

What to check before buying

Common mistakes

The gooseneck spout is to manual brewing what the tamper is to espresso: the interface between your hand and the chemistry. Master the pour, and you master the extraction.

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