If you want to know what the best coffee machines on the market are, you should look at the Specialty Coffee Association's list of certified home brewers. To get on the SCA's list, a coffee maker has to be able to hit some exacting standards like brewing time, water temperature, and even an easy-to-understand instruction manual. It's a high barrier to entry, but a great way for consumers to know the machine can make a good cup of joe.
The SCA list is excellent but not infallible, which I realized as soon as I saw the huge box for the Café Specialty Grind and Brew, an exciting machine made by GE that has a built-in coffee grinder. Fill the tank with water, pour beans into the hopper, and hit Start. Fresh grounds flow down through a cutout in the showerhead, straight into the filter. You decide how much you want, from a cup to a carafe, and the machine doses the beans and the water and starts brewing. Unfortunately, it's big and not as versatile as you might think.
Big and Tall
I instantly thought of aircraft carriers when I pulled the machine out of the cardboard, as it's about 14 inches wide, 10.5 inches deep, and 17 inches high, which is on the high end of ginormous by coffeemaker standards. Think twice unless you have acres of counter space. Part of this volume comes from having a built-in grinder, yet something similar like Breville's Grind Control is notably smaller.

