Coffee Paraphernalia

Espresso is unfortunately one of those holy grail hobbies. Once you start making your own, you will forever be trying to make “The Shot;” a perfect, sweet, rich, tiger-striped shot of coffee that manages to be life affirming in only 1.5 ounces. I once managed to get a near-perfect shot out of a former housemate’s comparable setup on a fluke, and it got me hooked. In that interest I just picked up a conical burr grinder, which is the last piece of coffee paraphernalia required for a proper coffee-dork setup. This brings my coffee paraphernalia up to a little over $300, for the following:
coffeepara.jpg

Pictured:
Lello Ariete 1375 Espresso Machine – Not a great machine by any stretch of the imagination, but very nice for $200. It has a chromed brass portafilter, mostly metallic construction, a thermoblock heater, and a pump that can (at least in theory) generate 15 bars of pressure. I still can’t get a perfect shot out of it (barely 20 second extractions, and they start to show some bitterness at even that), but it has only had one (easily cleared) failure in 10 months of use, and even my sleep-addled brain can get a shot better than what Starbucks serves out of it every morning. I’m hoping I’ll be able to get longer, more consistent shots by adjusting the grind now that I can get instant feedback on small batches. My only complaints on the machine are related to the steamer wand sometimes being a little slow to pick up (sprays hot water before steaming, but works very well with good technique once it gets going), the system dripping out the portafilter after the machine has been used, and the drip tray corroding easily and/or not catching liquid from internal venting.

* New Addition: Jura Capresso Infinity 560 Conical Burr Grinder – I used to not believe in the “good grinder is as important as a good machine” mantra, but after fiddling with some friend’s grinders in the past, and noticing tangible degradation of shot quality over the course of a pound of ground coffee, I’m now a believer. I’ve only put a couple ounces of coffee through the new grinder, and only at one setting, but it made nice, even, cool grounds, with virtually no flaking. The only things I’m not terribly pleased with are the cleaning procedure between different beans (it retains a lot of grounds inside the workings), and the amount of static it generates in the catch basket. My sentiments seem to be matched in other reviews as well.

* RSVP Terry Tamper – A perfectly usable, well regarded metal tamper, way, way, way better than the horrible scoop-end plastic ones. Mine had some nasty cast lines, which I have ground off the edges of 49mm end with hand files; it still sometimes pushes some grounds over the edge of the basket, but its a lot cheaper than equally regarded alternatives, and I’m sure I’ll eventually get it stoned smooth.

* Bodum Pavina 2oz glasses – These things are way more expensive than necessary, but they are so cool. Double walled, single blown glass, so the contents look like a 3-d parabola floating in space. One of mine has a hairline crack from “rough handling” in the dish rack, but I’ve been continuing to use it anyway, and it doesn’t seem to be spreading.

* Some unremarkable small steel frothing pitcher, and the included measuring scoops, cleaning brushes, etc. from the various components.

The Bodum French Press in the picture belongs to one of the housemates; we also have a drip maker tucked away somewhere, but it didn’t get used enough to justify its counter space with the better options on hand. The sharp eyed caffeine junkie will also spot an ingenuitea in the picture; that corner has become our little altar to caffeination.

All told, my setup costs less than a typical “nice” espresso machine (this is just a hair over minimum cost of entry for real espresso setups, they head off toward infinity at an alarming rate), and, with good technique, is capable of producing drinks at least on par with most of the local coffee houses, so it is a success.

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4 Responses to Coffee Paraphernalia

  1. Sarah says:

    I don’t think I’ve pulled the right amount of water through the coffee yet. How much is a shot? Is it an ounce? 1.5 oz.? I end up filling up my two 2-oz. Bodum cups with water pulled through 2 tablespoons of coffee, then dumping in however much steamed milk it takes to fill up my largish coffee cup. Am I doing it all wrong?!

    My espresso maker: http://www.amazon.com/DeLonghi-BAR32-Retro-Pump-Driven-Espresso/dp/B0002A3S66

  2. PAPPP says:

    Traditionally, a shot of espresso is 1.5 +/-.25 Oz of output, in ~25-30sec, from 1.5 +/-.25 Tb(~1Tb per oz of output) of grounds, tamped evenly into the portafilter with some amount of pressure (most people say ~30lbs on average). Good espresso will have a layer of caramel colored fine foam (crema) making up about 1/3 of it’s volume after it settles. Further details are things that crazy coffee people who own thousands of dollars of hardware argue about for fun, and really depend on the machine, bean, grind, every other possible input factor, and personal preference.

    Ideally, the shot you get will be about as bitter as good very dark chocolate, with the crema sweeter than the rest, but that is hard to do consistently. I would love to be good at it, but I’m not really, and even the people I know who work as baristas know better than to claim they are.

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