https://m.youtube.com/watch?feature=...&v=dn9OuRl1F3k
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=QLEBfom0mhM
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Poor answer but I guess a bit of all round. I would have thought most have some sort of control over grain size?
I'm currently using a standard cafetiere and possibly want to move to drip - I do enjoy a slightly longer brew. I'm also intrigued by Espro's double press - in theory it allows you to grind a little finer and just seems more refined.
I guess I'd like to give aeropress a go too.
Thank you both - will look into the suggestions, may work out well in combination with buying an aeropress.
Dealing with MBK themselves can be tricky, customer service isn’t their strength, but if you can find a reseller with one, that would be better.
I bought this recently and although it's not infinitesimally adjustable it does pre-infuse and steam quite nicely, and I've been getting very good results with it overall.
Morning lattes and evening double espressos for me, and I like a robust and aromatic brew. I'd really appreciate some good bean recommendations.
Illy red is all I've been able to lay my hands on lately, and it's not really floating my boat.https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202...2ca28da247.jpg
Please Google a roastery near you, support a local business and get fresh beans you can pick up, build a relationship and get advice, just my 2p
The Sage is great, if you are making lovely coffee that's all that matters.
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Aeropress, any Arabia coffee beans, heaped coffee spoon(7g+), water off the boil topped up to mark 2., inverted method, stirred with a wooden chopstick, left for about 3 to 5 mins, press into my bodum carrier or mug, top up with water so as not to over extract. Drink it black. Been doing this for 2 years. Part of the morning routine. A nice comfortable, familiar cup of coffee every morning.
Whilst some in that price range can get fine enough for espresso, it doesn't mean you can then adjust precisely enough to actually tailor your extraction appropriately - the ability to make tiny adjustments to the grind size tends to come with a higher price tag due to the more precise tolerances needed. Being able to dial in the grind that precisely doesn't matter so much for other extraction methods, but for espresso it is really quite important.
I'd suggest either investing more now than your ideal £50-70 to get a hand grinder capable of almost all brew methods (1zpresso's JX Pro for example - £190) or don't worry about espresso and go for a grinder that's suitable for other brew methods only which will get you into your lower range. As already mentioned, if you can get to the £100 mark the Aergrind by Made by Knock are highly regarded. It will certainly work for espresso, but it may not be able to dial in the grind quite so precisely (to some people being able to only change the grind size and that result in the amount of time changing by just a couple of seconds to produce a pre-defined amount of espresso, is key).
Oh, and I’d avoid the 1zpresso stuff, or whatever it’s called, Chinese made, and no support. Not bad kit, but if (when) it breaks, you’re on your own.
Thanks. I think the espresso requirement can be more lenient on. I cannot see me getting a proper machine and maybe an occasional moka pot use only (along with aeropress)
On the V60 suggestion above - thanks that was the way I was thinking!
The grinder reminds me of a tripod if I use the photographer analogy. Costs more than some key equipment but you’re rewarded with a good one!
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If you can’t find a good supplier locally as has been suggested then you could give Rave Coffee a try for mail order. I find that their signature blend works really well in my Sage machine, not massively robust but very smooth and a good depth of flavour. Freshly roasted beans make a world of difference.
I use a V60 too, for lighter roasts and when I want to make more coffee. It's a lovely method.
Edited to add that if I could start over again with this coffee thing, I'd go for a very low retention, single dose grinder like the Niche Zero for its ability to change rapidly between grinding very fine for espresso and much coarser for pour over, its really decent grind consistency at the price point and its size. It is £500 though and electric. I really, really like the ability to take a hand grinder with me and not have to rely on the longevity of electronics and having a power supply, which is why I've not sold up my two grinders for the Niche.
I recently ‘upgraded’ from a Francis Francis X1 which I’d had for many years any just used pre-ground Illy red.
Deciding I wanted a bit more engagement, I decided to go with a lever press and got a La Pavoni Europiccola and an Iberital MC2 grinder (which I subsequently discovered made accurate dosing very hard, so always ended up grinding too much).
I’ve since also purchase a Rok grinder which seems to do a pretty good job.
It’s been a steep learning curve to say the least, with a good month or so of truly terrible shots. I’ve found a good local roaster and am now trying their various beans.
I still have a way to go to with consistency, but I’ve discovered that a lever press is not the easiest contraption to master (but it is lovely to look at!).
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Takes about 30 seconds tbh, ive got a pid set to 139 and I'm only creaming a small amount of milk , i don't drink lattes
Just make sure you have a warmed double wall glass
Yes a twin boiler machine is nice but not a big deal for me as I drink straight espresso mid week
Re Devon, I live here, Devon coffee rocks
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I've got an Aergrind which works well. Before that I use a Porlex ceramic burr coffee grinder which I imported from Japan via Amazon. That was decent for the price at the time too.
I had a Europiccola for about 10 years but chopped it for a Rancilio Silvia about 3 years ago.
I found the La Pavoni was too inconsistent for me:
25% of shots were heavenly
25% of shots resembled dirty dish water
The rest were somewhere in between!
You can end up down a rabbit hole with these machines with PIDs, grinding off the spouts on the portafilters, becoming obsessional about your own tamping pressure etc.
They do look great though!
Its an epic rabbit hole that itches and itch, to piss about on something pointless for self gratification
Decent DC1 and Niche plus G Shock or a second hand Rolex? Hmmm[emoji848]
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I am using the Expresso Beans Fairtrade Strong Sainsbury’s own. Come’s in 1kg bags,when opened keep in the fridge. Grind as I want it perfect proper coffee every time.
If you are loving the coffee that's a that matters. At some point you may either have a coffee somewhere else you think is even nicer and what to replicate it, or you get the affliction to play a bit for fun, after all some of use enjoy the process as much as the coffee
Be warned though, as pointed out earlier the rabbit hole is regressive, for every 10ft you dig down to get about a 1cm of extra pleasure
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No machine here is going to come close to replicating four years in Colombia with the freshest of beans arriving from the Triangle daily and the satisfaction of paying 50p on a street corner for a small slice of heaven :untroubled:
These days I get the most pleasure from the Bosnian džezva but there's a modest bean-to-cup DeLonghi for convenience, a selection of a moka pots and the obligatory AeroPress for travel.
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...fbcea3a4_b.jpg
https://live.staticflickr.com/4467/2...12920fd7_c.jpg
Well, not really, but it looks similar.
Have a read of this article.....http://www.bbc.com/travel/story/2014...bosnian-coffee
Great machine indeed. Breville here in NZ and the coffee is consistently good.
It went to its new owner yesterday (work colleague). You can still get a terrible extraction if the grind is wrong but easy to play around with. TBH, I still haven't made a coffee of the same quality as my Breville on my new machine!!!! But it's easy to get sucked into coffee as is the culture here and dream of being your own Barista...not as easy as they make it look. I'm waiting to start a training course as I'm longing to drop some normal work and make coffee part time. Would be lots of fun.
Breville fan boy here. Super easy to use which is a plus for a novice like me but the coffee it produces is great. Have just subscribed to union press for regular deliveries which is a nice way to get various beans sent through weekly/fortnightly/monthly
That's a good article (thanks crazyp) that describes the distinctive differences and the experience rather well. You certainly tend to end up with fewer grounds in the cup and a thick foam - I've learned the hard way to keep a close eye on the džezva as it can get very messy if it boils over. But much of the enjoyment comes from evoking a time and a place - Bosnians are easy-going, hospitable and witty; Sarajevo and Mostar are amongst my favourite cities anywhere. Starting the day with my best friend by lingering over a brew on the veranda of his little house on Čiovo always comes to mind. Simple pleasures.
While on this (sub-)topic, anyone any idea whether this is for coffee? Unusually it has a lid so maybe for something else (water/milk?). Watch shown for scale!
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Just finish this off. Very nice. Still debating whether to invest in an espresso machine or not. https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202...5740c7ba4c.jpg
I prefer the flavour rather than the strength of coffee and so go for filter / pour over techniques.
https://www.dkpw.co.uk/watch/v60.jpeg
I started with the Chemex 6 cup traditional glass container with the wooden handles (which by the way makes a damn fine wine decanter - great pour control) but have moved over to the Hario V60, using the Hario goose necked kettle, and Hario scales. This ties in really nicely with my local roasters in Edinburgh, Artisan Roast, who generally don't produce dark, or heavy roasted beans. I follow the James Hoffman methodology to produce a nice two cup jug of coffee most mornings - 30gms of coffee ground in my Eureka Mignon Mk2 stepless grinder.
100 deg C Water for light roast, can go slightly colder with dark roasts.
60g/L ratio (16.67:1 ratio. Can be up to taste)
Grind Size: Slightly finer than medium (though ultimately up to taste)
- Rinse paper in V60 and pre heat it
- Pour in coffee, make a well with your finger in the coffee bed
- Start timer and gently pour 2x coffee dose as water to bloom (up to 3x coffee dose if necessary)
- SWIRL IT GOOD
- Wait 30 to 45 seconds
- Spiral pour in 60% of total brew water in until 1:15 (i.e 60% of 500g, pour to 300g)
- Keep it topped up, slowly pouring the rest of the brew water over 30 seconds. (i.e. 100% of brew water by 1:45)
- Little stir in one direction, then a little stir in the opposite direction. (About 1 to 1.5 revolutions each way)
- Once it has drained a bit, then SWIRL IT
- Wait for the coffee to fully drain. You want a flat bed of coffee and no big grinds of coffee on the side of the filter paper.
- Enjoy!
At this time, many coffee shops are hanging on in there by on-line sales. If you can, support your local coffee shop and roasters! These are on the way! :)
https://www.dkpw.co.uk/watch/dkpwatson64_1587685315.jpg
Thanks, looks exactly like one of these! https://www.etsy.com/uk/listing/768999037/
I really fancy a Turkish coffee now.
Thanks for the BBC post
I am looking to get a grinder and will be doing V60 pour overs.
I have heard varied comments on Porlex and have been recommended MBK (made By Knock) but they are out of stock.
Any recommendations? preferably from those grinding for pour overs :thumbsup:
I have a Comandante C40 and its fine for espresso so will be perfect for pour over
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I've got a barattza virtuoso, you could pick up a barattza encore that would be great for filter coffee and in your price range. Got mine from coffee hit (no affiliation) but they are currently sold out.
Thanks, that has given me a few more options.
Everyone I have looked at has been sold out.
Looks like everyone is spending lockdown baking and making coffee :smile-new: