Overengineered *home* appliance is still better than drip coffee
much better coffee than drip machines better price when found on eBay non-commercial simplicity - my kind of "starter" espresso maker
non-commercial grade espresso maker takes some tinkering to learn the machine - a "starter" machine MSRP is too pricey for a "starter" machine
Posted 1 year ago - My father received this machine as a gift, or we would never have considered it. Been using it for almost two years and it has worked out well. I'm now buying a second one so I don't have to wait for the weekends to use my dad's Breville. I jokingly call this my kind of starter espresso maker because it has the minimal functionality to make real espresso (not just strong drip coffee). Much of the machine is manually operated so it takes some tinkering to get the right flavor out. The price is anything but "starter." But it has risen above the pretenders out there that makes drip coffee under the espresso moniker. The spent grounds come out wet unless you let it drain. Not realistic if you're making more than one shot at a time. The grounds are supposed to be loosely tamped according to the user manual. The machine uses a thermal block and heats water in pulses. Not an ideal espresso maker. The "overengineering" is the saving grace. The machine successfully compensates for its shortcomings in temperature control, pressure control, and extraction control by applying an interesting fix: the double walled filter that creates a backpressure. No other machine needs to apply bursts of water into the grounds before extraction. but hey, nevermind that the extraction happens too fast, or that the espresso shouldn't come out dark then light. It tastes great with some experimenting. It's actually good dark.
Did you find it helpful , unhelpful, or inappropriate?
Buy now at Overstock.com: $402.94





Rated






Comments - Post a comment