shadow745
Well-known member
Define affordable and intended use...I need to find an affordable option, any recommendations?
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Define affordable and intended use...I need to find an affordable option, any recommendations?
How much is affordable?I need to find an affordable option, any recommendations?
I always have to laugh at the mention of 'experts' as if some have it all figured out. Biggest issue in modern day is people trying to follow someone's lead and things don't pan out the way they expect. Then the equipment is usually blamed when every situation will vary based on lots of variables.How much is affordable?
The cheapest way is getting a Bialetti Brikka Moka pot, this makes espresso better than a regular Moka pot due to the pressure valve in the tube. Just follow the directions and watch YouTube videos on how to use them, I say that because idiots buy this particular Moka pot, turn the heat up too high then complain their coffee came out of the hole in the top and splattered all over their stove top, that's the fault of the user, not the pot. This particular Moka pot will make darn close espresso flavor, dare I say, I couldn't tell the difference, but someone with expert coffee taste buds probably could.
Appearance-wise, the crema produced is about a third to a fourth as much as an actual espresso maker, but some coffee experts say crema is overrated, and from my experience I agree.
Moka pots are sized by cups, but those cups are Italian cups, not American cups, so a 2-cup moka pot makes about a third of a cup of coffee, so obviously a 4-cup model will make about 2/3 rds of a cup.
If you get they now make small round Moka pot filters, this filter goes between the O ring and the screen, this filter is optional, but it does help with raising the pressure a tad and helps to increase the crema a bit.
Some will say that the AeroPress is the cheapest espresso maker, but that device is NOT an expresso maker, it's a French Press with a filter.
Stay away from cheap espresso machines, like the Walmart kind of crap, those things won't last long. If you want to spend under $500 I made a couple of suggestions in an earlier post, go with a manual machine, they work fantastically, either get the Cafelat Robot which is built to last through the mummy apocalypse, or go with the Flair 58, make sure you get the pressure gauge option it makes pulling shots much more accurately. Again follow directions and watch YouTube videos on how to operate whichever one you buy.
Call me seriously unimpressed with his thoughts or any other wannabes. It's likely too heavy for him to pick up, bwahaha. One thing people also overlook is tons of great used equipment out there at very fair prices. Doesn't have to be new with a high cost to easily get the job done.That $500 plus 9Barista Espresso Moka pot doesn't seem to get any better reviews than a cheaper $50 Bialetti Brikka. According to James Hoffman's video, the crema produced looked the same as what I get with the Brikka. If someone wanted to spend that sort of money you could get the Cafelat Robot with the guage manual lever pull espresso maker. Plus James Hoffman does have concerns about parts breaking and needing to be replaced, the only thing that ever needs to be replaced on a regular Moka pot is the O ring seal. Parts might be difficult to get in coming years for the 9Barista due to the fact they have only made 300 of them, so if they go out of production so much for spare parts.