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Leaf & Bean

Leaf & Bean

Brew Better at Home

OriginAustralia
Known forSpecialist coffee and tea equipment — from hand-ground beans to the finished pour — designed in Australia under the Davis & Waddell name.
From the Davis & Waddell familyEvery brew method coveredBorosilicate glass brewing vesselsManual through to electric12-month guarantee on electricals

Leaf & Bean is the coffee and tea brand from the Davis & Waddell family. The range runs the full brewing path — grinding, brewing, frothing, serving, and storage — across manual and electric methods.

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EU's Take

Our Take on Leaf & Bean

What we like: the brew-method coverage is genuinely complete — most brands at this price pick plungers or pour-over and stop, but Leaf & Bean runs the lot, manual through electric, and the borosilicate-and-stainless materials are the right call for the job. The rechargeable coffee scale and gooseneck kettle bring third-wave brewing gear down to a price where you can try it without committing café money.

Worth knowing: the range is designed in Australia and made offshore, like nearly everything at this price point. The electricals are solid domestic units, not commercial machines — if you're pulling thirty shots a day, look at dedicated espresso equipment. For the home bench, the value here is hard to argue with.

Born From a Kitchenware Family

Leaf & Bean started inside Davis & Waddell — one of the themed ranges the Australian kitchenware brand built to cover specific corners of the kitchen. Most of those ranges stayed ranges. Leaf & Bean outgrew the family home: coffee and tea preparation turned out to be deep enough, and Australian brewing culture demanding enough, to carry a brand of its own.

The catalogue reads like a map of how Australians actually make coffee and tea. Plunger people get glass French presses and double-wall presses. Stovetop loyalists get the Piazza Moka pots. The pour-over crowd gets gooseneck kettles, rechargeable 0.1-gram scales, and conical burr grinders. Cold brew, electric espresso, matcha whisks, glass teapots with infusers — each method covered properly rather than tokenistically.

Materials follow function. Brewing vessels are borosilicate glass — the heat-shock-resistant standard for boiling water over coffee. Frothing jugs and canisters are stainless steel. Drinkware in the Freya range is reactive-glaze stoneware, each piece slightly different out of the kiln. Where electrics are involved — kettles, frothers, grinders — they carry a 12-month guarantee.

The pricing keeps specialist equipment in everyday reach. Most of the range sits under fifty dollars; nothing crosses a hundred and fifty. The intent is the same one Davis & Waddell built its name on: gear that works properly, priced for kitchens rather than cafés.

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