A classic French press in glazed latte-cream stoneware. The 8 cup / 1L capacity is the size that suits most households — enough for a full pot at breakfast, brunch for guests, or a slow morning of refills, without being the awkward 12 cup size that no one really needs at home.
The stoneware body is what sets the Arezzo apart from the standard glass cafetière. Stoneware holds heat far better than borosilicate glass, which means coffee stays hot through a second and third cup rather than going lukewarm by the time you've poured the first. The thicker walls also feel substantial in the hand — closer to a teapot than a lab beaker — and the opaque body hides the coffee inside rather than showing the grounds settling at the bottom. For anyone who's used a glass cafetière for years and gets tired of cold second cups, the upgrade is genuinely noticeable.
The brewing setup is standard French press — coarse-ground coffee, hot water, four-minute steep, plunge down through the fine mesh filter, pour. The stainless steel filter captures grounds without leaving sediment in the cup, and lifts out for dishwasher cleaning rather than needing to be wiped by hand.
Practical details that matter for daily use: the plunger is replaceable rather than fused to the body, so a bent or worn plunger doesn't mean replacing the whole cafetière. The handle stays cool enough to grip while the body is hot, important when pouring a full litre of coffee for guests. Backed by a 10 year guarantee, which is the brand's confidence that this isn't a disposable piece of kit.
The latte-cream finish is the softer, warmer option in the Arezzo range — pairs well with timber and stone benches, breakfast tables in natural light, and the rustic-modern fit-out most current Australian kitchens lean toward.