Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Second Generation Coffeeduck PERMANENT Refillable Coffee Filter for the Senseo SUPREME & DELUXE ONLY

Second Generation Coffeeduck PERMANENT Refillable Coffee Filter for the Senseo SUPREME & DELUXE ONLYFor starters, this definitely DOES work with the Senseo Supreme that Amazon sells. I don't know what problems other people had, but I have a suspicion that it comes from how sensitive this is to correctly loading the coffee.

The Coffeeduck works great if you use it correctly.

I'm giving it four stars, instead of five, because it's tedious to use. And if you don't read the instructions and pay attention to what it says then you're going to be unhappy. I've had this for two weeks, using it about five times a day, and I've got the routine figured out. If you're not mechanically inclined then you probably won't like this. A friend watched me use this and immediately said "I'm just going to stick with the pods".

You cannot fill the Coffeeduck all the way to the physical top of the metal carrier. If you do this then the Senseo will not close. I suspect that this might have been the problem for the other reviewers here that said these aren't compatible. Instead you fill it to a smaller lip 2/3 of the way up (the instructions describe this, but you need to pay attention to the instructions). The tricky bit is that you need to get all the coffee crumbs off of that lip, which can be tedious. If you don't do this correctly then things won't work well (the Senseo won't close, or you'll get watery coffee, or it will leak water).

Also, if you pack in the coffee too much then the Senseo won't be able to pump the water through the coffee, and instead the water will come spewing out the sides of the machine and all over your countertop. I don't think there's anything the coffeeduck designers could have done to improve this. It's just something you're going to have to learn.

Note: I suspect the Coffeeduck for the base model Senseo is easier to use. The metal coffee carrier for that unit is smaller, and there won't be the internal lip, making cleaning off the excess coffee crumbs far easier (fill it, wipe it, and go). If you haven't bought a Senseo yet, and you think that a Coffeeduck will be one of your primary uses, then I would get the base model Senseo along with the Coffeeduck Classic that is designed for it. If I had that model I would probably give it five stars.

This has been my favorite purchase of 2009. We have a Senseo Supreme and our coffee selections were very limited until Coffeeduck. It works perfectly every time, but should only be used with finely ground coffee.

Buy Second Generation Coffeeduck PERMANENT Refillable Coffee Filter for the Senseo SUPREME & DELUXE ONLY Now

Use fine grind and it won't leak any water. Espresso grind won't allow the water to filter through.

Read Best Reviews of Second Generation Coffeeduck PERMANENT Refillable Coffee Filter for the Senseo SUPREME & DELUXE ONLY Here

I own the Senseo SL7832/55 Single Serve Supreme Coffee Machine, Chrome. None of the Coffeeduck items mention this model. I contacted them in Holland and they told me this model would work in the 7832/55 but it doesn't. It fits too tight and strains the Senseo machine to close the lid. Since it doesn't fit, I really can't review it.

Want Second Generation Coffeeduck PERMANENT Refillable Coffee Filter for the Senseo SUPREME & DELUXE ONLY Discount?

Pros:

1. Works with Senseo SL7832/55 Supreme.

2. Saves money over time since Senseo pouch averages about 25-60 cents per cup of

coffee.

3. More choices of coffee. You're no longer limited to what the Senseo offers.

Cons:

1. Must use fine grinds in order to work properly. Unless you can get a grinder

that gets you the perfect grind everytime, you will probably experience water

leakage and grinds overflowing in the machine from time to time. Packing the

coffee grinds too tight will result in grind/water leakage also.

2. Time consuming to fill and clean. Like another reviewer mentioned, you have to

be careful when filling the coffee and keep the rim clean of any coffee grind.

After the brew, you will end up with quite a bit of watery sludge which could be

time consuming to clean.

3. Less or no foam. If you like the foam produced by the Senseo pods, you'll be

disappointed with the amount of (or lack of) foam the coffeeduck produces.

Conclusion:

While the Coffeeduck works as advertised, I feel that it defeats the purpose of buying a Senseo machine, which is the ease of use in the first place. With the Senseo, you can have a brewed cup of coffee with 2 press of buttons within a minute. With the Coffeeduck, I traded the convenience for the freedom of packing my own coffee grind. Unlike using the coffee pods, it has been difficult to get a consistent cup of coffee using the Coffeeduck. If you want the same convenience of using a Senseo pod but with your own coffee, I would suggest trying out other methods of using a paper coffee filter first.

Primula Neapolitan 4 Cup Aluminum Stovetop Coffee Maker

Primula Neapolitan 4 Cup Aluminum Stovetop Coffee MakerI own one of these, it has seen better days...but it still continues to brew wonderfully dark and rich Italian style coffee...It is so simple, very few moving parts...and if you use the size of cups you are supposed to...you will get 4 small cups...REAL...espresso sized cups...Needless to say...you need to have espresso coffee..not the weak American coffee's...The only thing I do that is not mentioned in the original instructions is to put a paper filter in the filtering portion. I tend to grind my own beans...and espresso grind is a near powder...so one more layer of protection is always good...for the last drop.

Fill the bottom with cold water, insert the espresso grounds to the top of the container, connect the items together and place on the stove on a low heat setting. When you hear the water bubbling it's time to remove the pot and gingerly turn it upside down and allow the flavor to begin. Within a minute or so you will have the most wonderfully strong and dark brew awaiting your espresso cup.....

The coffee maker made better coffee after I used my father's method instead of the enclosed instructions. The coffee came out very weak when using the directions of placing the coffee grounds in the top part of the coffee grind holder. Also it was easier to boil water in a pot instead of the coffee pot and then pour the water into the coffee groud holder and let it seep through.

Please email if you have any questions.

Buy Primula Neapolitan 4 Cup Aluminum Stovetop Coffee Maker Now

This classic Coffee Maker was originally designed in Italy in late 30's and early 40's... It's a simple concept and makes the Best Coffee, hands down!

I'm sorry for the folks who wrote the reviews prior to mine. They simply DID NOT use it correctly.

First you need to have the right ESPRESSO GRIND, meaning the grind has to be fine and powdery versus course grind, allowing the water to get the best of the beans.. DON'T GET THE WRONG IDEA, This does not mean you will be drinking a strong dark espresso. This just means you will drink a full flavored tasty coffee. Even a bad coffee-brand will taste great using this.

Two, For Best Results...If you get the 4 CUP maker, then you need to make 4 cups every time, not 3 or 1...Plus after boiling and evaporation in fact you end up with 3 well proportioned Cups worth.

USING IT: The Lid is only used to keep your coffee warm after boiling, so remove the lid. Fill the Water pot (without spout) to the top, insert the Filter part into the water pot. Add your coffee grinds into the filter. (Don't be shy if you want to taste your coffee)(Putting the right amount of coffee for flavor is TRIAL and ERROR) After you've added your coffee, twist the filter lid onto the filter. Place the Coffee-Pot (with spout) upside-down on top, creating one single unit. (WITHOUT the SMALL LID) Place onto the stove top (do not burn the handle). After it comes to a boil, with oven mittens or cloth, put one hand on each handle keeping the unit connected, then flip it upside down. This will put the Coffee-Pot with spout in the correct usable position as your coffee percolates through :-) yummy! Wait 2-3 mins then serve

Read Best Reviews of Primula Neapolitan 4 Cup Aluminum Stovetop Coffee Maker Here

I have been using the Neapolitan type coffee maker for many years and still have a 6-cup and 8-cup which I'm very satisfied with. However, when I received this pot there was a slight dent which I decided to just live with rather than return it. I have to use a filter with it to avoid having coffee grinds in my coffee because apparently the holes are just a little too large as I have been using the same brand coffee for years with no problem in my other pots. Needless to say, I am very dissatisfied with this product and would never purchase this brand again.

Want Primula Neapolitan 4 Cup Aluminum Stovetop Coffee Maker Discount?

This was NOT a good Buy. I was lucky to get one cup of coffee and it was a supreme hassle brewing it. The description was obviously incomplete (in hindsite) and misleading. Wasted Gift and Money. Very disappointed.

Save 12% Off

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Espresso Machine Maker Saeco Talea Touch S-Tt-St

Espresso Machine Maker Saeco Talea Touch S-Tt-StThe Talea Touch makes terrific coffee and has functions that are well thought out and easy to use. The only problem is that they can't make one that works.

I bought mine in Dec. 2009 from Seattle Coffee Gear. By March 2010, I had returned my third defective machine to Saeco. All three had different problems; the first leaked all over the counter when brewing (an internal hose defect), the second could not be programmed or hold a date and time; the third has a steam wand that leaked (poured) water during the brew cycle enough to fill a shot glass for each coffee made. As of September, I have had to return it two additional times for repairs a total of 5 times.

Saeco will fix or replace this again but what does that tell you about their QC? Saeco customer service has been helpful and courteous once you reach them. Be prepared to wait > 45 minutes on their customer support line to reach a human being.

Saeco came highly recommended and it does makes great coffee and lattes when it works. If you like Audi's, this may be the coffee machine for you.

One last note, I have attempted to submit this review many times at Seattle Coffee gear and somehow it never appears on their website.

We have has this machine for over three years now and LOVE it! Perfect lattes every morning. I love that everything is automated. It takes all the guess work out of the process. I would recommend this machine to anyone and would buy it again in a heart beat. It has paid for itself by not going to Starbucks every week. We don't have the milk island so can't comment on that.

Buy Espresso Machine Maker Saeco Talea Touch S-Tt-St Now

BUNN NHBBD Velocity Brew High Altitude 10-Cup Home Coffee Brewer, Black

BUNN NHBBD Velocity Brew High Altitude 10-Cup Home Coffee Brewer, BlackSep 20, 2009: I've owned this product for two days now. So far so good. Amazon packaged this item well and I got free delivery in 4 days. Thanks Amazon! I'm very pleased with your service.

This coffee maker is replacing a Braun unit, which gave me nothing but grief with its numerous problems. I did quite a bit of research on Consumer Reports (CR) and Amazon and decided on the Bunn. I respect CR, but sometimes their recommendations don't match owners' experiences, who use a particular product for a much longer time than CR's testers do. Because of this, I value the owner reviews on Amazon.

This coffee maker has a nice look to it--at least for my taste. The funnel and a decanter's handle seem a bit flimsy. I have a preference for sturdier things. Still, I don't expect them to give me trouble in the future. If they do, I can get replacements from Bunn or a reseller.

You *really* have to pay attention to the setup instructions, which are good. I failed to write down the serial number ("date code") on the bottom of the unit, so I had to go through a lengthy step to drain the reservoir in order to get at the info necessary to register my coffee maker. (The extra time was needed to cool the hot water in the reservoir. Bunn's FAQ has the exact steps.)

In any case, one should take the time to read the instructions carefully--especially, since this coffee maker operates differently than most others. For example, adding water and closing the top lid starts the hot water to flow immediately (ie. starts the coffee making process). There's no switch to push. So you'd better have the funnel and the decanter in place, otherwise you'll have a major mess to clean up. I've made some pots of coffee by now and got a hang of it. It's not tricky at all--just different.

As one reviewer already suggested for the non-high altitude model, you can save on energy by using a timer. I use an X10 3-prong Appliance Module for the coffee maker along with a programmable Mini Timer. (You can get these from x10.com. Despite their weird web site, their gadgets work. Radio Shack used to re-sell their stuff.) The Mini Timer turns power on to the coffee maker via the Appliance Module at 5am and shuts it off at 5pm. So the water is heated 12 hours per day, when I'm likely to want to make coffee. I still must be physically present to make a pot of coffee and don't believe that any automation is possible. This is fine by me, since brewing is so quick.

I don't use the warmer plate at all. Instead, I pour the hot coffee into the thermal carafe from my decommissioned Braun coffee maker. This keeps the coffee acceptably hot for hours. Similar thermal carafes are available for $20-30 from Amazon.

Some people complained that the glass carafe makes a mess when pouring coffee from it. I didn't encounter this problem. I'm sure it's related to pouring "technique."

On CR's recommendation I ordered a new and inexpensive coffee grinder from Amazon (Mr. Coffee IDS77), which should give me control over grind quantity and level of coarseness. I haven't yet received this grinder and therefore can't comment on its efficiency.

Again, on CR's recommendation I bought Eight O'Clock Coffee 100% Colombian caffeinated coffee, which was their top choice and it's not very expensive. I used this coffee today. It was fine and not bitter.

As other people already pointed out, you can get Bunn filters inexpensively. I found sites that sell them in bulk for $14/1,000.

In summary: I like my new Bunn. The coffee it made came out tasting great and the brewing process is very fast. If anything changes, I'll post an update.

I bought this coffeemaker after reading many reviews (like this one I'm writing!). It really helped that someone had mentioned the need to get the high altitude model, since we live near Denver, over a mile high. The review I read said that the warming plate will get too hot on most models (boiling point related to altitude, and all that science info...) on most models.

Someone else wrote about the carafe not pouring well. I have not had even one problem with pouring.

I love my new Bunn coffeemaker. It truly brews 10 cups of delicious, silky coffee in mere minutes. I'm enjoying some right now! Cleanup is a breeze.

The warming plate still seems to get too hot if the coffee is left for some time, so that is something that is better than usual on this model, but not perfect.

Nowadays, you can easily spend around $100 for a good coffeemaker. My Bunn should be an investment that will last for years.

Buy BUNN NHBBD Velocity Brew High Altitude 10-Cup Home Coffee Brewer, Black Now

I have used many coffee pots over the years from perc to drip to stove top espresso. And i tried many

different models of all of these.Included in the mix were espresso machines that did not work either.

So i gave up ever thinking that i could make a good hot cup of coffee at the altitude we reside at which

is over 7,000 ft. But finally there is a coffee pot that does work well at high altitudes and it is this one. If you

have wanted good coffee and hot coffee in the same cup this machine will do it. This is a great machine.

I'll admit to one small minor drawback and that is i turn it off after we are finished with the morning coffee

since we only drink coffee in the a.m. I then have to remember to quickly turn it on as soon as i get up

so that it will be ready for use in ten to fifteen minutes. However this will not be an issue in the winter as we

drink coffee throughout the day then. Great product!

Read Best Reviews of BUNN NHBBD Velocity Brew High Altitude 10-Cup Home Coffee Brewer, Black Here

We were somewhat apprehensive that we would find another BUNN that was as good as our classic one we had and used every day for about 17 years, but this one is an excellent replacement!!!

I love that it does not begin to fill the caraffe until the lid is swiveled closed and the stainless steel is really nice. We love it!

Want BUNN NHBBD Velocity Brew High Altitude 10-Cup Home Coffee Brewer, Black Discount?

I have only owned Bunn coffee makers for the past 25 years and would never buy anything different. I love the BUNN NHBX_B Model.

Save 26% Off

Monday, July 29, 2013

Home Basics Espresso Maker - Stainless Steel - 6 Cup

Home Basics Espresso Maker - Stainless Steel - 6 CupGets the job done in a no frills kinda way and may well make the perfect gift when paired with a tin of Alessi Espresso Ground Coffee, 8.8-Ounce Cans (Pack of 6) or Alessi Decaf Espresso Ground Coffee, 8.8-Ounce Cans (Pack of 6)

Changed my review from 4 to 5 stars after 2 months of use.

The good:

Once you start making coffee this way, you will start to carry your pot almost everywhere you go. This one is perfect for transport; small, light and inexpensive.

The double edged sword:

The screen on this unit seems to be super fine, which may lead to premature clogging. The upside of that is that you get less grind residue in a cup.

Things to consider:

Originally, I had thought the handle was smaller and less substantial than I would have liked. I have changed my mind. The handle is up to the task.

I have been able to speed up the brew time with my vev vignale by microwaving the water before adding it to the pot. The small size of this unit makes that exercise much more difficult and not worth the risk.

The Alessi Espresso products have recently become available in my local market Rouses Supermarkets (New Orleans, LA), prior to that I had been a long user of the 8 O'clock Coffee Brand able to grind it (espresso to turkish) at the local market.

Caslo

Braun 3107 Tassimo Coffee Maker

Braun 3107 Tassimo Coffee MakerHot-beverage system brews drinks at the touch of a button in about a minute

Patented T-Disc system with barcode technology; customizable strength settings

Beverages pour directly from T-Disc into cup; no measuring, no fuss, and virtually no cleanup

Measures approximately 10 by 15 by 16 inches;

Makes espresso, cappucino, hot cocoa, tea, and coffee just with a push of a button.

The system works great and makes delicious beverages. Used it at work.

Used machine, bought to use up remaining discs after buying two new machines over the past six years; neither now functioning. This used machine works fine -so far. Good price. Good delivery.

Buy Braun 3107 Tassimo Coffee Maker Now

Sunday, July 28, 2013

Gaggia Espresso Dose

Gaggia Espresso DoseI have owned a number of Gaggia machines and liked them. I bought this for my girlfriend and it is the worst espresso machine I have used. it is a poorly manufactured plastic imitation of a Gaggia machine.

It is too light and you have to hold it down to attach the porta-filter.

The heating tray on top is practically useless as it doesn't get hot.

the Filter seal started leaking after 2 months and I have waited 3 months for a replacement.

It does not siphon water into the tank so you have to prime it everytime you use it.

Don't waste your money spend more and get the Gaggia Baby or Coffee. both of these are great machines that will make better espresso.

This machine worked for 30 days then failed. I returned it to wholelattelove for repiar and I'm told it will be 2 months before I get it back. I'm not impressed with their service nor with the buggy Gaggia Dose.

I dont recommend either the Dose or wholelattelove

Buy Gaggia Espresso Dose Now

Chef's Choice 6800001 Cordless Electric Glass Kettle

Chef's Choice 6800001 Cordless Electric Glass KettleAfter reading every single review and practically poking my eyes out....I decided on this one, in part because it has a glass pouring spout, glass interior and hidden heating element. No plastic touches the boiling water...only the condensation on the plastic lid. It's slim pickens out there these days. My 16-yr-old Russell Hobbs kettle suddenly bit the dust. It was a real RH (before the company was sold off) and it had the heating element inside the stainless steel kettle. Over 16 yrs, we went from a family of 6, hardcore tea drinkers....down to just the two of us. To go from that old RH to this glass one was a leap of faith. I initially am not disappointed. I boiled an initial pot of water & dumped it. Then I washed the interior out with soap & water before boiling two more kettles to spill out. It was easy to get my hand inside to clean it. It took 7 minutes to bring ice cold tap water to a rolling boil at the maximum fill line. I enjoyed a pot of tea without any strange smells or tastes. It poured nicely into my teapot without any spills from the spout. It looks nice on my counter top and takes up less space than my old kettle. It's not too heavy nor is it cumbersome in any way. I can't live without the speed and convenience of an electric kettle and this one makes me super happy. I'm like "so modern" now! The only downside was that Amazon did not have this kettle in stock so I made the purchase from a vendor and had to pay a shipping charge (I'm a Prime gal). The vendor did pack well and I received it within 2 days anyway, so other than having to pay for shipping, it was still a seamless purchase. I will certainly update my review if I encounter any trouble with it because I am a militant tea addict. You're welcome.

I just received this today, so only time will tell. I read a LOT of reviews before making this purchase and so far I am happy that it has none of the short-comings I've read about other kettles. My primary requirement was that the kettle not be plastic. I've read about many of the "stainless steel" models rusting over time or having plastic liners or other plastic parts. This glass kettle solves most of those issues. The only plastic inside the kettle is the bottom of the lid and a small frame that holds the metal debris screen in the spout.

Starts bubbling within 30 seconds on being turned on and brings 30 oz of cold tap water to a rolling boil in just over 2 minutes. Boils the 50 oz. maximum volume of cold tap water in about 5 minutes. Pours beautifully. No spills or slop. Well balanced. Easy to read volume gauge. When the lid release button is pushed, the lid locks in the open position making filling easy. The lid also 'locks' shut.

The cord isn't actually retractable, but can be shortened or coiled up under the base. The only feature this kettle lacks that some avid tea drinkers might like is a temperature control. The only feature this kettle lacks that I would like is an audible signal that the unit has turned off.

So far, so good as I attempt to eliminate plastics from all of my utensils, food storage and processing. I'm very much hoping this product endures well.

Buy Chef's Choice 6800001 Cordless Electric Glass Kettle Now

I bought this as a replacement for a Breville Kettle.

[Good]

Glass design: really like being able to see what I'm boiling even if it is just plain water. I also really like the fact that glass doesn't rust, nor does it contain horrible, unhealthy chemicals that plastics tend to leech when they are heated.

The spout doesn't drip.

[Bad]

Overfilling is very easy (and makes this not so safe): At most match the 2nd highest mark for water. The highest mark will result in an overfill. What happens when you overfill and boil water? Well water will start coming out of the unit's glass and seep into the part where the glass and metal meet, meaning that water will get inside the unit. In other words this is a potential hazard. I never had to think about stuff like this with the competing metal electric kettles. (It is fine when you get into the habit of filling it just fine.) This design needs work. I'm willing to pay more money to get a better design. Chef's Choice, just please don't cheapen your products.

Capacity: Does not heat as much water as competing metal kettles.

Must hand dry: Like all electric kettles I've seen so far (even the Breville's), you have to dry the metal plate after use. Why? Because eventually it will rust. I found this out the hard way with past competing products. The reason? Well no matter how you tip the kettle, not all the water is going to leave the metal plate. This is easier to do with the glass container, since you can actually see the metal portions unlike the all metal kettles. In Chef's Choice defense, this is a problem that all products in this class (that I've used) suffer from.

Plastic: While it is nice that there's less direct contact with plastic and the heated water, it's still there on top as the lid as well as the filter. I would pay more to have no plastic in contact with the liquid being boiled. Having plastic in contact with the heated water negates the health benefit of the inertness of glass.

On / Off Switch feels like it's easy to break. I think Breville's switch design is better.

[Misc]

The price is fair.

The automatic off function works.

[Verdict]

I still haven't seen a perfect electric kettle. This may not be the one, but it's comparable to competing products. It's not bad.

Read Best Reviews of Chef's Choice 6800001 Cordless Electric Glass Kettle Here

We really like the electric glass kettle. It brings water to a boil quickly and then shuts off right away. It also shuts off when I lift it off its base. Very efficient. It is somewhat larger than my need but overall I would purchase it again.

Want Chef's Choice 6800001 Cordless Electric Glass Kettle Discount?

After owning several Capresso H2O Plus electric kettles and having them all fail shortly after the warranty expired, it was time for a change. The Chef's Choice kettle has all the features that I grew to love in the Capresso. They include:

a fast boil of 8 minutes for a full kettle, way faster then my stovetop. I even use the boiled kettle water to pour into a small sauce pot for cooking on the stovetop. A nice time saver.

an all glass carafe, no plastic contacts the boiling water except for the small frame that holds the mesh screen at the spout. It's entertaining to view the water reach a boil.

an illuminated on switch that shuts off when the water has reached a full boil.

this kettle retains the temperature of hot water better then the Capresso. It maybe because the Chef's Choice has a larger boiling plate at the bottom of the kettle which is great.

the kettle has a nice brushed stainless steel trim around the outside. It fits in well with the rest of the kitchen.

initially the pot felt awkward to pickup and pour, but that's because this kettle has more heft then the Capresso. Now that I've used it everyday it feels and pours just fine, like anything new you have to adjust to the change.

lastly it looks great! Lets just hope it gives years of service. I hope this was helpful.

Save 25% Off

Saturday, July 27, 2013

Urnex Cleancaf Home Coffee Maker & Espresso Machine Cleaner ans Descaler 2 PACK

Urnex Cleancaf Home Coffee Maker & Espresso Machine Cleaner ans Descaler 2 PACK
  • Dual-action formula eliminates coffee oils and dissolves mineral deposits.
  • Cleans both home coffee and home espresso machines.
  • You get 2 boxes - 3 single use packets per box (each single use packet weighs 1/3 oz.)
  • Product includes the full US manufacturers warranty
  • Cleancaf® Brand Cleaner and Descaler is an essential component to maintaining great tasting coffee at home. Cleancaf® is designed to remove flavor-tainting stale coffee oil residue from home machines. Its dual action formula also prevents the accumulation of scale deposits which are responsible for slow brew times and machine malfunctions. Portion packaged for easy use Cleancaf® also contains a blue-dye which helps to insure proper rinsing.

The package on these and my old ones show a cup of coffee. The new ones I just received show a pot. Had read a previous review warning of same, but since photo shows cup I fig'd all was ok. Does not seem the same strength as before??? Did not help much, went from 30 minutes brewing to about 23. I have since on Capresso's advice tried Durgol and cut my brew time down to 15 minutes just like when coffee maker was new. I'm switched despite the hefty price diff., you apparently get what you pay for.

Buy Urnex Cleancaf Home Coffee Maker & Espresso Machine Cleaner ans Descaler 2 PACK Now

This is the best stuff that I've ever used to clean a coffeemaker! I was introduced to it when I received a free sample with the purchase of our coffeemaker, and after trying it, I was sold. I've been ordering and using this product for the past 2-3 years.

I will caution you to be sure to buy the product as pictured. Either the company has reformulated and repackaged these, or there is a counterfeit version out there, but the latest purchase I made (which has a picture of a coffeepot on the front rather than a coffee cup) does not seem to work as well. I sometimes have to repeat the process twice (using twice as much product) to get the same effect that I did before.

Read Best Reviews of Urnex Cleancaf Home Coffee Maker & Espresso Machine Cleaner ans Descaler 2 PACK Here

Not sure I can come up with 20 words about this. It is awesome. Cleans the coffee maker very well and is easy to use. Makes the coffee taste better and your coffee maker will last longer and work better if it is clean. ;-)

Want Urnex Cleancaf Home Coffee Maker & Espresso Machine Cleaner ans Descaler 2 PACK Discount?

Best coffee maker cleaner that I've ever found. I've used others and this works so much better than the rest!

It is easy to use, I use it in my Keurig coffee maker. I like it a lot better than using vinegar, then you have to run cold water through forever to get the spell and taste out. I am glad I found it on-line.

Nespresso Pixie Espresso Maker With Aeroccino Plus Milk Frother, Electric Titan

Nespresso Pixie Espresso Maker With Aeroccino Plus Milk Frother, Electric TitanThe Pixie has got to be the smallest and most portable single-serve coffee machine on the market. It has so much going for it! Like other Nespresso machines, this Pixie produces a top-notch coffee product. This particular model offers a milk frother alongside the coffee maker--and that is a real plus. The two together cost less than if purchased separately.

All things considered: The Pixie works every bit as well as the older and larger (but not much larger) CitiZ and the newest "kid on the block", the Nespresso U. The Pixie has a smaller water well. It also has a smaller compartment for spent capsules. In my experience that does not matter. In fact, it's probably better. You should start with fresh water as often as possible and it's easy and quick to dump spent capsules.

I think the whole line of Nespresso machines are far better than Tassimo and Kuerig machines. The Nespresso machines are better designed: They work quicker and quieter; have a smaller footprint and are less bulky; are much better looking, and, most importantly, the quality and variety of the espresso blends cannot be beat. I haven't tried the new Starbuck's machine, but I do know this Pixie is smaller and has a lot more style.

Our first Nespresso machine was a CitiZ and it still sits proudly on our kitchen counter. The Pixie was just being introduced when we bought our CitiZ several years ago. We ended up with the CitiZ because it came in a color that better matched the style of our century-old house. But I've always thought the Pixie was awfully cute and stylish. And who doesn't consider a smaller footprint a plus?

YOU CAN STOP READING HERE: While the above paragraphs sum up my opinion briefly, you can keep reading for more information. Sorry, but I found it hard to streamline this review--after all, I've purchased (and dumped) three Tassimo machines; I purchased and use the Nespresso CitiZ and the Latissima on a daily basis; I own a single-serve Gaggia by illy that sees very little use lately; I acquired a Jura ENA Uno about four months ago, and it daily provides us with freshly ground and brewed beans (we buy Peet's beans), and last, but not least, I've also acquired a Nespresso U with an Aeroccino frother. I'm thinking I've got some experience upon which I base my opinions.

MORE ON THE PIXIE:

--I don't know why this impresses me, but there is a white backlighting (around the spent capsule compartment) that I think is way, way cool. Plus, the backlighting allows you to safely grab your hot coffee in the dark. If you're low on water, the light shines red.

--The Pixie doesn't drip when it's done pouring like the CitiZ and Latissima models tend to do.

--The Pixie is basically portable: Being small and light-weight, having a cord that tucks away and a handle that doubles as the inserter lever, this little guy is easy to transport. You are going to be able to take your favorite coffee with you on a road trip--now that is a very exciting thought!

--Water heats up hotter in the Pixie (than in the CitiZ). Some people think this is important. I'm not one of them--no matter how hot the coffee is, I think it is very important to heat the cup first. (A very simple thing to do: Add hot tap water to the cup and let it sit in the sink a minute; but, yes, it is still another step to accomplish during your morning rush-hour routine before you leave for work.)

--The platform that your cup sits on is a bit cumbersome. It folds up for tall cups, but it's your cup that actually holds the platform up and out of the way. You could consider it a design flaw or maybe it adds to its compactness and portability. This only matters if you like to make fancy concoctions once in a while, forcing the use of a taller cup. (Sometimes I like to pour through some whipped cream or add a shot of something boozy.)

REGARDING THE AEROCCINO: For the difference in price between a Pixie with or without this stand-alone milk frother, you really should buy the combo. Several years ago when I first investigated this frother, it was valued at nearly a hundred dollars--so there is great value in purchasing it along with the espresso machine. It's a great little gadget: It has a beautiful shiny metal outside surface that is very substantial; it is quiet; it is quick; it produces beautiful soft foam; the handle is strong and easy on the hand, and because it has a high quality non-stick inner surface, it is easy to clean by simply rinsing it out. Its downfalls: The base is lightweight and will not grip a counter top; the heavy electric cord is adequately long, but excess cord can't be hid in the base, and the worst offense: The spout will leave you with a drip every time. In comparison to the Starbuck's model, this frother is made of a high quality, beautiful metal; the Starbuck's is black plastic.

COMPARED WITH THE LATISSIMA MILK FROTH: I like the froth created by the Latissima better than the froth from the Aeroccino. The Latissima foam is finer and thicker, and it is ADJUSTABLE. I also like the fact that the milk container on the Latissima can be easily disengaged from the machine and stored in the frig. There is no waste and clean-up is accomplished with a few seconds push of a button; only enough milk is sucked through the machine per serving. In a morning rush, it is easier to set the container of unused milk back in the frig. If you want easy cleaning with The Aeroccino, the residue milk has to be rinsed before you leave the house.

LET'S DISCUSS COFFEE: After all, the machine is just a vessel for the end result. And if the coffee that is made for the machine isn't great, then why even look at the machine. The coffee in the Nespresso pods is superb. It's way better than anything available from Tassimo or Kuerig.

It's been several years since we switched from a Tassimo machine to a Nespresso machine. (If you want to hear about why I totally dislike Tassimo, ask me and I'll be happy to elaborate.) At the time of the switch, we were used to drinking large-size cups of coffee. So we felt we were taking a chance on the Nespresso blends--not knowing if we'd be able to tolerate the change from a big cup of brew to just a few sips. But the change has been effortless and so rewarding: Because the coffee is so smooth and rich, it is easier and more satisfying to relish a few sips rather than big gulps of average-tasting coffee. We really didn't know what we were missing.

If you think you like more mild coffee and think that espresso will be too strong for you--then you think like I did. And I was wrong, and there is no reason to be afraid of Nespresso expresso and lungo (long cups--still pretty small): This great coffee is not bitter; it has a variety of fragrances, and feel, and flavors in each sip--and I've found that I am now leaning towards the more "intense" blends. With the Pixie there are two buttons to choose how much water you want to pass through each disc, and they are easily programmable, which offers you an infinite variety of strengths. Now I find that I prefer to go along with the pre-programmed amount of water for each blend. After all, the recommendations come from experts and they know what they're doing!

Nespresso has a lineup of 16 blends (plus there are special blends offered throughout the year). The blends by Tassimo and Kuerig cannot compare. It might have something to do with the fact that the Nespresso pods are made of aluminum and keep the ground coffee fresher than the others which are all made of plastic or maybe the Tassimo and Kuerig product is made to suit less savvy, less experienced coffee drinkers. I can't offer a comparison between the Nespresso and Starbuck pods, because I've not tried the Starbucks' Verismo system yet. I can say that Starbuck pods are more expensive than Nespresso pods, and there are way fewer choices. Regarding the "green-ness" of the pods: Nespresso's are recyclable and the others are not.

If anyone is interested in more details of the 16 Nespresso Grand Crus: Nespresso uses about 95% Arabica and 5% Robusta in its blends. Their beans come from Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Kenya, Ethiopia and India. Blending, roasting and grinding are all variables that enter into creation of a particular flavor blend. Investigating the blends, it is obvious that most of the beans come from Central and South America, Nespresso does not have a blend that features Kenyan Arabica beans--and that is my only dissatisfaction with the Nespresso lineup. We love Kenyan coffee and own a Jura ENA Uno machine so that we can brew our favorite Kenyan coffee from Peet's on the West Coast. It is interesting to note that the Starbucks' Verismo system does not offer a Kenyan pod at this time. I've got more info on the different Grand Crus--just ask me; I'll keep an eye on this review.

You don't give up any flavor by using the convenience of a Grand Cru capsule. And don't think that the capsules "cost too much": You want great coffee? You're going to have to pay for it. Amen. It doesn't matter if you grind your own or buy it in capsule form. In fact, I pay more cup-for-cup when I grind my own.

Two other things: Nespresso augments their 16 regular blends with a special, limited-time-only blend about three times a year. And it is very, very easy to buy the capsules. They are available online at nespresso.com. The ordering process is simple, the product is always fresh, customer service efficient and pleasant, and shipment is quick, quick.

If someone tells me the Nespresso capsules do not produce the "best espresso you'll ever have", I ask them where to get a better one: If they're being completely honest, the answer will not be "I get a better espresso at home", not unless that person is an expert with a very expensive machine.

One last thought on the capsules: The jewel-toned, aluminum capsules are a visual treat. The capsules are like little gems, little bon-bons. They are truly beautiful to look at. While it is surely not the most important point to be made about the 16 Grand Cru, I always like to remember to use all my senses when drinking coffee.

Having a cup of coffee has been part of my daily routine for decades now, and for the past few years I've been making that cup of coffee with a Keurig machine. After using the Nespresso Pixie Espresso Maker and Aeroccino Plus Milk Frother for about a month, I can definitely say that the Pixie espresso maker will officially replace the Keurig.

This is my first Nespresso product, and first espresso maker for that matter, so I was expecting something similar to my Keurig machine. When I received the Pixie, I was pleasantly surprised at the difference. I found the Pixie to be much smaller and more stylish than my Keurig machine. Even though it's smaller, the Pixie feels much sturdier, too. The espresso maker and milk frother package also includes 16 sample capsules of various flavors, which are all very good. The espresso the Pixie makes far exceeds what the Keurig can brew and rivals any espresso I've had at the various coffee shops here. Although the cup of espresso the Pixie brews is smaller in volume than a regular cup of coffee, I quickly got used to that. I actually found myself taking more time savoring the espresso instead of just gulping it down. Having coffee in the morning is a much more pleasant experience now.

The features of the Pixie that I found a real plus:

* The footprint is small which leaves more countertop space.

* The machine is ready to brew in 30 seconds and brews a cup of espresso in 25-30 seconds.

* The power cord length is adjustable. Extra cord can be stored in the base.

* There is a carrying handle that doubles as the lever for the chamber where the coffee capsules get inserted. When lifting the Pixie by the handle, the machine is nicely balanced making it easy to carry.

* The functions are simple; On/Off button, Regular cup brew button, Larger cup brew button. Both of the brewing buttons are backlit.

* The machine powers off automatically when not in use.

* The compartment for spent capsules (which is clear) is backlit by an LED light. Not only does it look very stylish, it also helps to see when you're brewing a cup of espresso in a dimly lit area.

* A red light on the back of the machine lets you know when the water level is low.

* The espresso capsules are aluminum and recyclable.

* The machine is very easy to clean.

This package also includes the Aeroccino Plus milk frother. The Aeroccino Plus makes both cold and warm frothed milk that is perfect for lattes and cappuccinos. The frother is whisper quiet and produces soft, pillowy foam very quickly (60-70 seconds.) The frother is also built sturdily and very easy to clean. I often find myself making a quick cup of cappuccino after dinner with a shot of kahlua, something that I never really did at home before.

At approximately 60 cents, the cost of the Pixie capsules can be a bit steep but I'd spend much more than that for an espresso at Starbucks, and Keurig cups cost about the same. You can get Nespresso capsules at various retailers but it's cheapest if you order them directly from Nespresso online. Some of the reviews here list the capsules at $.55 each but the capsules I ordered were $.60 $.65 each. I'm not sure why, but it could be that it's more costly if you're ordering from outside of the continental U.S. (I'm in Hawaii.) The cost of shipping for my order was $6.95 via USPS priority mail; not too bad.

The price for the Pixie/Aeroccino frother combo and capsules is high but you really do get what you pay for. The cost for the combo is also cheaper than if you purchased the Pixie and the frother separately, so you do save some money there. I highly recommend this product if you're someone who enjoys savoring a good cup of espresso.

Buy Nespresso Pixie Espresso Maker With Aeroccino Plus Milk Frother, Electric Titan Now

Face-off: Rancilio Silvia vs. Nespresso Pixie

OVERVIEW: As a long-time coffee snob I couldn't miss the chance to smackdown these upstart espresso wannabees. Well, more fool me. I was no match for the charms of little miss Pixie; this cheeky wench promptly staked a claim on my valuable counter space, right under the wings of old matron Silvia.

BACKGROUND: I've had a Rancilio Silvia V1 for over a decade. Years ago I made the popular PID modification: a computerized thermostat for superior temperature control. I've replaced the boiler, twice, and the steam valve. I've upgraded its over-pressure valve and tuned it for optimum steam pressure. I don't just grind my own beans, I buy fair-trade single-origin 20 pound bulk bags and roast to perfection on a homemade roaster. I make at least four lattes a day, and grind through a pound of coffee a week. To be sure, the PID'ed Silvia is hardly the Rolls Royce of espresso machines, but it is the Toyota Camry: a tried and true performer; a middle-of-the road favorite. The Nespresso is the new Smart Fortwo: affordable, stylish, leading edge, versatile and fun. Sure, they'll both get you where you want to go, but they're not really in the same market niche.

I've been wanting to give the Nespresso a workout for a couple years, and when Amazon Vine gave me a chance to review not one, but two models, I jumped. They are: the Nespresso Pixie (C60) and the Nespresso U (D50), both with the Aeroccino Plus milk frother. To which I added the Coffeeduck refillable capsules. What follows is a comparison of all of the above versus my old standby, Silvia.

SUMMARY: For a quick and tasty single shot of espresso or small cappuccino the Aeroccino frother with the Nespresso U and Pixie do a consistently good job. Compared to my Silvia, well, I've made many worse cups over the years, much worse, but, after a decade of mods and mastering technique, these days I usually make better.

INTRODUCTION: To start with, let me say that the Pixie and U model ranges are not Nespresso's top-of-the-line but closer to introductory level. Their least to most expensive model ranges are as follows: essenza, U, PIXIE, citiz, lattissima and maestria. As to temperatures, warmup times, and taste, I couldn't detect a significant difference between the U and the Pixie models, so contrasting them comes down to aesthetics and ergonomics. If I write "the Nespresso" I mean either the U or Pixie models, interchangeably. Also, when I write "cup of coffee" versus "espresso" I'm merely referring to the volume of water pushed through the pod, though a purist would rightly distinguish between a Cafe Americano and a ridiculously over-extracted espresso. Temperatures were taken with my Extech 22-816 digital multi-meter, and weights were taken with a Philips HR2394 kitchen scale. What follows is a particularly long, perhaps overlong, review. If you couldn't care less for technical comparisons, ancillary diversions, personal opinions and supplemental recipes skip to the succinct conclusion at the end.

TEMPERATURE: Some people complain Nespresso temperatures are too low, and regarding a cup of coffee it's a fair criticism; though regarding a shot of espresso it's wrong. A shot of espresso was usually around 175° degrees Fahrenheit (though it could range from 165° to 180° more on that later), but a cup of coffee only reached around 155°. In comparison, my Silvia's espresso temperature was around 165°, but as I can set the Silvia's PID to any arbitrary temperature, that's really only relevant as a way of saying the Nespressos are right in the ballpark for espresso. However, many people recommend coffee temperature at 155°-175°, so at 155° the Nespresso really is on the low side.

VOLUME: Because a "normal" shot of espresso is called a "double", it is possible for marketing departments to do semantic gymnastics around the term "shot of espresso" with enough ambiguity to avoid a lawsuit. Without getting into a blizzard of definitions, let me simply assert that a single is 1oz, a double is 2oz, a triple 3oz, and what you would normally get if you ordered a shot from a barrista would be 2oz "double" shot of espresso. Now for some hard numbers:

The Nespresso U had the following default shot volumes: small=0.75oz, medium=1.1oz, large=3.25oz.

The Nespresso Pixie had these default shot volumes: small=1.55oz, and large=3.5oz (no medium button).

I say "default" shot volumes because both models are easy to reprogram. And I eventually did so, practicing without a pod, until settling on 1oz single shots for the small button, and 4.5oz coffee cups for the large.

Now, a cup of coffee is obviously larger than a shot of espresso, but even more so these days. My grandma's heirloom coffee cups, circa 1970, hold 5 ounces; the smallest for sale at Starbucks is 8 ounces; and my modern coffee mugs hold 11 ounces. The Nespresso reservoir is only 30oz, so you would get just three ten ounce cups of coffee from the entire reservoir. Be warned: temperature-wise, taste-wise and capacity-wise, using the Nespresso to make "cups of coffee" means making cups of coffee sized just right for Deputy Fife in the Mayberry Diner.

ADVICE, TEMP. SURFING: Unfortunately, although the Nespresso machines do a good job of keeping the first few ounces hot, past 3 ounces temperature falls rapidly. As a practical matter, this doesn't affect me because I like the Nespresso for single shots (1oz) of espresso or small cups (4.5oz) of coffee. That gives espresso at 175° which is perfect, and coffee at 155° which is okay.

Rancilio Silvia owners learn to their dismay all about temperature variability, which is why the PID is such a popular modification. But what we've learned can help Nespresso owners, too. The technique is known as "temperature surfing" and means operating the machine in a particular way so as to give consistent and optimum temperatures.

For the Nespresso, my surfing advice is simple: always draw a large empty shot (3oz) of hot water into your cup before loading a pod and making the espresso or coffee (first tossing the hot water down the drain). This does two things. First of all, it heats the cup. Most of your expensive espresso machines have a warming tray above the boiler expressly for the purpose of keeping espresso cups hot; because a hot cup makes for better taste. The Nespresso doesn't have a warming tray, but by filling the cup with hot water you warm it up even more, plus by running a few ounces of hot water through the Nespresso you pre-heat its internal elements. My measurements consistently showed a 10° temperature increase from the first to second cups, following this technique. The first shot was typically 165° and the second was around 175°. On a couple of occasions I managed to get shots as high as 180°, but this was after dozens of consecutive pulls with hot water alone and not consistently repeatable: the fifth shot might be 180° but the sixth would be back to 175°. Eventually, after 30 minutes of experimentation the cartridge hatch on the Nespresso U model was too hot too touch, but the espresso temp. remained 175°.

WARMUP TIME: Compared to Silvia, the Nespresso is a dream: just 30 seconds from powering on to drawing a warmup shot, after which it's as warm as it's realistically going to get. Silvia's vast bulk takes at least 10 minutes to get cosy, but preferably closer to 30. As a practical matter, I turn her on when I wake up in the morning half an hour later she's ready to give me lattes, but I still have to draw a warmup shot first. In the best case Nespresso's time from power-on to first shot of espresso is under 2 minutes; Silvia's: over 10. As a convenience factor, this should not be overlooked.

QUANTITY OF COFFEE GROUNDS: This is where I have a legitimate criticism of the Nespresso. Perhaps criticism is too strong a word, more like demystification. In any case, the criticism isn't against the Nespresso so much, as the pods.

Do a little research into the subject and you'll find that an espresso "single" is made with grounds weighing 7-8 grams/single shot, whereas cups of coffee are made with 14-16grams/liter (see Wikipedia articles on espresso and coffee_grounds). Probably not coincidentally my Philips kitchen scale tells me Nespresso pods contain 6-8 grams of coffee grounds (depending on the flavor).

Translated into English that means each Nespresso pod contains the optimum quantity of grounds for a single shot (1oz) of espresso, or a 4.5oz cup of coffee.

Compare Nespressos 6-8g of grounds to my Rancilio Silvia, for which I have three portafilter baskets with the following capacities: small=11g, medium=17g, large=22g. Most of the time I use my large triple basket and extract only double shot of espresso, which makes for a very rich shot.

Not only does "coffee theory" tell us we should be making 1oz shots, or 4.5oz cups, with a Nespresso pod's 6-8g of grounds, but my taste buds do as well. Sticking with those smaller volumes the Nespresso shot flavor compares very favorably with what I get from home-roasted beans on a super-modified Silvia. But a 2.5oz espresso from Nespresso tastes over-extracted; and an 8oz cup of coffee tastes weak, not to mention lukewarm and bitter.

Of course, taste is personal, and if you love triple lungo shots from your Nespresso, then more power to you. But before you judge, let me give you one bit of advice: try comparing one triple-shotted pod against three single-shotted pods (one pod against three) and see if the latter isn't astoundingly better.

For around ten ounces of top notch espresso Silvia costs me about a dollar a day, about ten cents per (1oz single-sized) shot. With Nespresso pods at sixty cents per 1oz single-shot pod over the course of a year the difference comes to $1800 enough to buy that Rolls Royce of espresso machines, or at least the Mercedes Benz. Of course, the reality is I would never spend that much, I'd just over-extract the pods and suffer with worse coffee. One can't helping thinking of the ink-jet printer: manufacturers practically giving them away then selling ink for more than its weight in gold.

COFFEEDUCK PODS. One way people save money is pod adapters that can be filled at home, and I've tried the black Coffeeduck brand at seven dollars each (for the Nespresso Pixie be sure to get the black ones). The breakeven point is about 15 shots, but I'm not sure they'll last.

Be warned, the Coffeeduck pod adapters won't work with the Nespresso U or any other automatic model only the manual models like the Nespresso Pixie. Not only do the Coffeeduck directions explicitly state this, but I mistakenly tried it before reading the fine print and they're not kidding: for one terrifying moment I thought I had ruined the Nespresso U. It's one reason to prefer the Pixie.

Getting the right grind with these is tricky. My Rancilio Rocky grinder must be set eight notches coarser than what I use for Silvia. I fill to the top, tamp with my finger, top off the grounds and finger-tamp again. I don't know how one would use these without an expensive espresso grinder, but since I do have one they let me fill my own pods for about twelve cents apiece. A considerable savings over sixty. The tradeoff is what you might imagine: time and mess from finger-tamping powdery dry grounds, then cleaning out the hot, wet, sticky grounds with a toothbrush. Still, saving fifty cents a pop, more or less, is nothing to sneeze at.

The espresso quality is top notch, every bit as good as Nespresso's Pods as long as I grind fresh and brew immediately. There is no advantage in pre-filling a bunch of them, as they go stale in less than a day just like any espresso grounds. This is one area where the Nespresso pods have a real advantage. With their airtight seal and special gases they keep fresh for, as far as I know, forever.

MILK FROTHING. First off, let me say that I absolutely adore the Aeroccino frother, and I wouldn't even consider buying a Nespresso without one. The simple reason is hot chocolate. Oh, and it's good for coffee-based milk drinks, too.

Using the Aeroccino is simplicity itself. Pour in ½ cup of 47° milk, press the button, and 60 seconds later it stops itself now pour out frothy 145° milk for your cappuccino. Pour in 1 full cup of 47° milk, press the button, and 120 seconds later you have frothy 145° milk for your latte. Cleanup is 53 seconds with hot water rinse and a paper towel wipe.

Now, those are good numbers, but, in a head-to-head face-off, the Silvia really shines in this department. Unfortunately, before it shines it has to warmup. First give it 60 seconds to heat up from espresso stage to steamer stage. At that point ½ cup of 47° milk heats to 160° in a mere 30 seconds. Meaning that on the first ½ cup Silvia is 30 seconds slower than the Aeroccino but 15° hotter. Thereafter no reheat time is required, and Silvia heats twice as fast as the Aeroccino, or given the same amount of time, heats 30° warmer. Even better, if I don't care about getting the world's best micro-foam I can put a two-cup pitcher of cold milk under the Silvia and walk away, returning several minutes later to a full pint of hot, slightly frothy milk for multiple lattes. Silvia's 115 second cleanup time is twice as long as the Aeroccino's 53 seconds.

Where I expected the Aeroccino to fall short is in making quality microfoam, and to a certain extent I right to worry, but it's not as bad as I feared. If you stick with only ½ cup of milk you can use the larger of the two Aeroccino paddles (the unused one stores conveniently on the underside of the lid) and it gives decent foam. By the way, they aren't kidding when they say not to use the large paddle with 1 full cup of milk I tried, and got milk all over the place, like putting too much soap in the clothes washer. Anyway, the larger paddle makes for a nice quantity of froth. It's not exactly microfoam (look it up on Wikipedia), but it's not bad. Needless to say, I can get perfect microfoam from Silvia, but to get it I have to stand there nursing the pitcher, and to be honest I don't usually bother.

COCOA. This is the Aeroccino's forte. I've been looking for something like this for years, and The Aeroccino does it. The secret is powered sugar. Nothing could be simpler. Secure the small paddle in the Aeroccino cup. Pour 1 full cup of cold milk into it. Add 1 heaping tablespoon of cocoa power (I've tried Hershey's, Nestle's and Ghiradelli's). Add 1 heaping tablespoon of powdered sugar. Press the button and wait for it to finish. Two minutes later you will have a perfect, unrivalled, sublime cup of hot cocoa. Pour into a drinking mug. Add a dash of vanilla, a sprinkle of cinnamon, a dollop of whipped cream or all three. If you think it's too sweet or too chocolatey, experiment with a half-teaspoon more or less of cocoa or powdered sugar, to taste, until you reach nirvana.

After heating and frothing the cocoa might form a film on the bottom of the Aeroccino, and if you don't wipe it out with a wet paper towel before making another cup the Aeroccino might overheat, flashing red. When this happens you can sometimes ignore it, taking the Aeroccino off its base, putting it back on, and pressing the button again, repeating as necessary until it's hot enough to drink. To avoid this altogether just make sure to wipe away any cocoa film from the Aeroccino before making a second cup.

If you use granulated sugar instead of powered sugar, then about 50% of the time the small paddle will pop off the nipple inside the Aeroccino. This is because the granulated sugar falls to the bottom of the cup and interferes with the paddle's rotation before dissolving. If this happens you will see the milk stop spinning in a whirlpool and you should press the button to turn off the Aeroccino. I won't tell you to reach in and reseat the paddle with your fingers in case its too hot, but when I've done that I haven't been burned. The paddle won't fall off twice because by that time the granulated sugar will have dissolved. To avoid this, don't add the granulated sugar at first with the cocoa, but wait until the Aeroccino has finished heating and frothing. Or just use powered sugar and forget about it.

The practical upshot of this is that I now drink a cup of hot cocoa every day instead of only once a month. I make it for the kids whenever they want instead of only as a very special treat. There simply isn't any comparison to "instant cocoa" mix, whether it be Nestle Quick, Swiss Miss, or whatever. Those substitutes pale in comparison to the genuine article, as every hot chocolate connoisseur knows. In short, if there's a better way than the Aeroccino to make hot cocoa, I'd like to know what it is.

ERGONOMICS. It's here where the only real differences appear between the Nespresso Pixie versus Nespresso U. Compared to those two, Silvia is a beast. And when you add in the size of the Silvia's coffee grinder (the Rocky) along with the necessary tray for catching loose grounds, it's safe to say the Silvia easily consumes five times as much counter space as the Nespresso on its worst day. That said, see my uploaded photograph of the various machines, which is the best way to get an impression of their relative sizes.

As far as appearance goes, you know what you prefer, but for maintenance I like the smooth surface of the U versus the ridges on the Pixie. The ridges in the Pixie tend to collect coffee and milk splatters and need a meticulous scrubbing with towel or sponge to clean. Whereas the U simply wipes clean. Also, the U cleverly uses magnets to hold the cup base in place, allowing you to remove it entirely if desired. Also, the U has the delightful ability to rotate the water reservoir off to either side or directly behind, letting you customize it to your space. Both the U and the Pixie have a place underneath for storing excess power cord.

Unfortunately for the U, I was much less pleased with its "automatic" pod handling. First of all, whenever the pod latch was opened the U eventually pumped hot water. Whether or not any pod was inserted. And not necessarily right away, but when the machine has warmed up, which might take 35 seconds. More than once I was startled by scalding hot water suddenly running out of the spout when my back was turned, because I had plugged it in, fiddled with the latch to see if anything was happening, wondered if it was, decided it wasn't, and forgot about it until whoops! better find a cup.

Also, against the U, it had a considerable amount of leakage into the drip tray on every shot: 13ml, to be precise. And as the overflow cup is only 260ml that means after 20 shots your overflow cup overfloweth. It made quite a mess before I worked that out. The Pixie doesn't have that problem, leaking perhaps 1ml per shot.

Worse, the automatic pod loader on the U jams up when trying to use the Coffeeduck adapter pods. Coffeeduck warns you about this, but I didn't read the fine print and tried it anyway, and it jammed. Because the U doesn't have a manual open, I wasn't sure how I was going to get the old pod out as I couldn't open the hatch, jiggling it with increasing desperation it finally broke free. Then, just to be sure, I did the same all over again with the same result. In contrast, the Pixie is easy to open and when a Coffeeduck gets occasionally stuck a simple flick of the fingernail will break it loose. Considering that "automatic loading" just means not having to pull a simple lever, it's hard to understand why you'd want it. Mainly for aesthetics, I think, to get rid of the lever. But I'm a guy I like levers.

AMERICANO VS. LONG BLACK. There are two ways to get a Mayberry sized 4.5oz "cup of coffee" from the Nespresso: the obvious way and the better way. The obvious way is to program your large button for 4.5 ounces, stick in a pod, hit it, and drink what comes out. It tastes exactly like you'd expect from pushing 4.5oz of (under-heated) steam through 1oz worth of espresso grounds: over-extracted, weak and bitter espresso.

Fortunately there's a better way: it's called "The Americano", and it's the way Silvia has always made cups of coffee for my many beloved ancestors who haven't yet cottoned on to these Frou-Frou lattes and expressos (sic). An Americano, for those who don't know, is just a shot of espresso with enough hot water to make a full cup. It's surprisingly good. The Long Black is even better, and is made in the reverse order by adding the shot of espresso to the hot water, preserving more crema.

To make a Long Black with the Nespresso is simplicity itself. Just program your small button for 1oz and your large for 3.5oz. After warming up the machine and your glass pour 3.5oz hot water into your cup by pressing the large button with no pod loaded. Then load the pod, wait 15 seconds, and press the small button to add a great single shot (1oz) of espresso to the hot water. Voila, a Long Black.

Earlier today I did a side-by-side comparison of a 4.5oz Long Black made on the Pixie (1oz espresso shot added to 3.5oz hot water) versus a simple 4.5oz shot through a single pod. As expected, the Long Black was smoother and sweeter. In exchange for a slight decrease in "strength" there is a large decrease in bitterness. If a stronger cup is desired, I'd suggest trying a Long Black made from 5oz water and two single shots (2x1oz) of espresso.

CONCLUSION. I'm a coffee snob who's spent countless hours roasting his own beans and nursing great espresso out of his (relatively) expensive and finicky Rancilio Silvia. I really wanted to hate the Nespresso, but I just couldn't. As long as one respects the limits imposed by a mere 7grams of coffee grounds per pod, the Nespresso U and Pixie machines are fine espresso makers. I got both to review and between them decided to keep the Pixie mostly because of its compatibility with the money-saving Coffeeduck adapter pods. The Nespresso's quick warmup time lets my non-coffee-snob wife make herself a quick pick-me-up, something she wasn't willing to do with slow and fussy Silvia. On the downside, respecting limits means pushing no more than 1oz of water through the pod: a "single" shot of espresso, perhaps added to no more than 3.5oz of hot water if making a "long black" cup of coffee. As long as one makes a pod-less warmup shot first, 1oz espresso shots are perfectly hot at 175°; and 4.5oz cups of coffee are acceptably hot at 155°. The Aeroccino makes quick work of foaming ½ cup milk for a cappuccino, and it does a fantastic job of making 1 full cup of hot cocoa add in the package discount and I would never consider buying a Nespresso without an Aeroccino. Price-wise, the Nespresso package costs well under 1/3rd of my Rancilio Silvia/Rocky combo, but taste-wise they aren't that far apart. On the other hand, the pods are considerably more expensive than raw beans so years from now you may wish you'd saved your quarters and gotten a high-end espresso machine to begin with.

Read Best Reviews of Nespresso Pixie Espresso Maker With Aeroccino Plus Milk Frother, Electric Titan Here

I have a secret way of making coffee. Espresso and Cappuccino in fact. Taught to me by my Sicilian godmother. It doesn't require hundreds of dollars of equipment. It only requires 3 kitchen items. What it does take is time. For years my family has won official and non official contests for best cappuccino, latte, espresso. In fact in 3 generations we never lost. I have a paint color named after my latte. Perhaps the highest compliment I ever gotten was from my husband. He is a non-coffee drinker who hates coffee in 25 years the only coffee he has ever had I made him. My coffee is the only one he requests, the only one he finishes until now. The Pixie maker is that good. Is it as good as mine? no. Not being modest but it is darn close. Close enough that my coffee dry husband has started to drink coffee regularly.

What pixie has over my coffee is it's easy and quick to make. fill up the water reserve. Open the capsule reserve, drop in a capsule, close the reserve turn the machine on. press button when it's ready. tada! The milk is easy too. There are two attachment. One paddle for froth and one whisk for foam (thicker) choose the one you want. pore milk up to the first like for foam, up the the second line for froth. Hold down the button. Red heats and froths. Continue to hold it and you have cool and froth.

The crema is perfect on the espresso. Not every machine produces crema, my method did not. Crema to keep things simple does not improve the taste of the coffee but can improve the experience. What crema does do is simply tell you the age of the coffee. If the flavor is being fully extracted from the beans and it being evenly extracted. It is the first signs of a good cup of coffee, but not the only signs. It is possible to have a great crema and a horrible cup of coffee or no crema and a magnificent cup of coffee. For people like myself that love a good shot of espresso the crema itself changed the experience. It makes a thicker coffee that is creamer and the flavor (good or bad) lingers on your palate. If you add milk to your coffee the crema becomes less important. It is just cool to see.

My review excellent products paired together to make a magnificent cup of coffee.

You can stop reading here or continue

Below, comparing with Kcup and pricing. Keeping cost lower.

Nespresso has a patented closed to market capsule. Making buying coffee capsules...limited. You can buy it from their site online or at one of their retailers, which are limited. Unlike the Keurig coffee maker. Keurig makes coffee pods in 3 sizes their most popular is their K cups. You can find K cups in walmart, target, and even at the corner store. My brother has a Kcup maker. My Pixie kicks his Kcup's ass for taste. K cups are a coffee maker not really an espresso or cappuccino maker. But my brother can get various flavors and types of drinks on sale.

His K cup maker has hot chocolate, tea, apple cider cups. Independent companies make cups that fit the K cup meaning that prices range and so do flavors. Pixie? well nespresso coffee has 16 standard flavors offered year round and every month or every other month they offer 1-3 special flavors which sell out fast and are limited. The limited time flavors have started a specialty market on amazon and on ebay. All the flavors are coffee there is not tea, cider or hot chocolate.

K cups cost 50 cents and less. On amazon there are bulk offerings at 26 cents. K cups are available on sale regularly.

Nespresso capsules are 60 cents. more for limited editions. Yes nespresso has sales, and the site gives away free capsules or items with purchases. My first purchase online I received my capsules at 35 cents per capsule and a box to hold a selection. Over all though Nespresso will cost you more if you buy only their capsules than K cups cost. Both companies cost less than grabbing a cup at Starbucks.

Convenience at a lower costs? Kcup has a refillable cup. My brother has tried one with his and found it works fine. The coffee is slightly weaker. So I went looking for a refillable capsule for my pixie maker. I bought a 10 pack from emohome (their site is cheaper) 4th generation fits the pixie. No other size fits. The refillable cups are easy to make. open the flip top, use it like a spoon and scoop out coffee with it and then tap with thumb. Top off. The tab on the cup should go either on the top or bottom when you put it in the machine, not to the side. It makes coffee of the same quality and strength. It makes a thick crema which means the refillable cup is giving you the same quality extraction as the regular capsules. Choose any coffee you would like to use. One refillable cup last for 30 refills says the company. I have used mine more with no issues. It lowers the cost of the cup of the cup of coffee to a 5 to 10 cents a cup. You can fill it with what ever coffee you want. I used illy, cafe bustello and my local grindhouse kind.

Of course I didn't stop there. The refillable was filled with tea in and without a tea bag. After resetting the water amount on the machine it made a perfect cup of tea. If you are lazy like me. then put the teabag in the cup. press too longs and one short. It fills up an average coffee cup with enough tea for a sitting.

I heated up water by running a capsule free machine for chocolate and added the mix to the heated water perfect. Any drink mix that dissolves can be made this way. I suggest doing one run first to clean the machine.

So for a fraction of the cost my pixie can make tea, coffee, and hot chocolate better than the kcup. I still haven't tried hot apple cider but I don't really like apple cider. Waiting for my brother to test that one.

The frother can froth or foam milk. It heats it or keeps it cool while frothing. perfect. I enjoyed it so much I bought some as gifts. In total I bought 3 and 1 broke. Nespresso guarantees their items for 1 year so they replaced it for free. The frother electronics is on the milk container and can not get wet, so be careful washing it and no dishwasher. If you plan to buy it separately it costs about $100. For $20 more you might want to invest in Breville Frother. The milk container has no electronics and can be cleaned separately from the base. It is dishwasher safe.

Honestly the system is great. I wouldn't have any other system but this one. Pre-filling cups or filling them in the moment doesn't take that much time and saves lot of money. I always have a box of the nespresso capsules in case I want a treat or one of their flavors.

Want Nespresso Pixie Espresso Maker With Aeroccino Plus Milk Frother, Electric Titan Discount?

I have been using Nespresso at home and at the office for 7 years now. I have a Nespresso D90/S1 Essenza Single-Serve Manual Espresso Machine, Metal at home and had one at the office until a few weeks ago when it finally stopped working (after 3 years of daily use by multiple people). The coffees offered by Nespresso taste great, are simple to use and come in a range of strengths and flavors.

I have been using the Nespresso Pixie in my office daily for the past week and I am happy to say that it is as fully functional as much larger machines from Nespresso. The included milk frother is a nice touch and I like it much better than steamer attachments. On to the review:

Pros:

Very small footprint perfect for tight counters. It would even fit in a large desk drawer or on a pantry shelf.

Easy to insert capsules

Automated choose a small or large cup

Simple 3 button operation (Power, small cup, larger cup)

Quiet

Nice design touches like the tilt up tray that allows you to use even full-sized coffee cups rather than just small espresso cups.

Milk frother is great, works well AND is easy to clean. Also relatively quiet. I much prefer this to steam frothers.

Cons:

Water reservoir is smaller than other machines, though this is by design as it is a 'Pixie'.

A couple of additional pieces of advise:

-Buy your capsules directly from Nespresso. They charge approx $0.55 per capsule vs a dollar or more from other sources.

-I find that the Ristretto (black capsules) work best for lattes and cappuccinos. It is a dark and rich coffee that can handle the dilution with milk.

-My favorite straight espresso is the Volluto (gold capsules). It is creamy, strikes the right balance between bold and mild and is a crowd pleaser.

I highly recommend this product for someone looking for an affordable, compact, espresso machine for home use.

Friday, July 26, 2013

Espresso carafe, fits Braun, Krups, DeLonghi, etc, stainless steel.

Espresso carafe, fits Braun, Krups, DeLonghi, etc, stainless steel.Since the dimensions are not clear, to let anyone interested that this is the exact size of the regular small glass carafes and will fit perfectly. It pours without dribling or spilling a drop. It does not have a lid but that is not a concern with my situation. It is also very easy to clean.

The workmanship is very good with a strong handle firmly secured but the gauge of the metal could be heavier as it sits flimsly on the counter and could fall and get dented and I took one star away for that.

Overall it is a great substitute for the glass carafes that can break and cause injury with glass splinters.

Love that I can't break this. Marks inside let you know how much water. Good for frothing too. I store my expresso machine in a Lazy Susan, so I have broken the glasd too often.

Buy Espresso carafe, fits Braun, Krups, DeLonghi, etc, stainless steel. Now

After breaking toe glass carafes, I had to upgrade. This was the perfect solution. Fits most espresso makers I think.

Read Best Reviews of Espresso carafe, fits Braun, Krups, DeLonghi, etc, stainless steel. Here

I got this because I broke my carafe for the second time, so this would be less expensive since I cannot break it. I love it and it stays and looks like new all the time even after using it so much for my expresso

Want Espresso carafe, fits Braun, Krups, DeLonghi, etc, stainless steel. Discount?

Its nice to have a carafe that will not break. I was pleasantly surprised that it had serving sizes written inside to give the proper measurements.

Gaggia 90500 Titanium Super Automatic Espresso Machine, Silver

Gaggia 90500 Titanium Super Automatic Espresso Machine, SilverThis machine replaces a semiautomatic Delonghi, which, I thought, was decent. Well...after using this for 3 weeks, I can honestly say that my old machine was barely competent. The Titanium is a wonderful machine. Not only is the espresso excellent but the panerella wand makes awesome froth and the thing looks great. It's fully programable and, once set, it's just a matter of pushing a button to brew a delicious espresso every time! It warms up in UNDER A MINUTE, has a large bean hopper, large water resevior, very cool blue lcd display...i can't rave enough. I've had no problems at all with this machine and I recommend it heartily.

Believe me, I thought long and hard for paying over a $1,000 for a coffee maker. The very idea struck me as a bit outrageous, since I've never paid more than $50 for a coffee maker before, but now I'm glad I did. I looked at several espresso makers, ranging from the simplest (and cheapest) to the mid-range machines on up to this beast, the Gaggia Titanium. I finally decided to take the coffee plunge and figured that I could always return it if my wife ("the decider", as I like to call her) vetoed the purchase.

I ordered the Titanium during my Amazon Prime trial, so it was shipped overnight for just a few dollars and arrived on a Monday. We had house guests at the time and while one didn't drink coffee, the other considered himself a hard-core coffee purist (he even has a roaster at home and buys his beans green). I noticed right away that the machine was packed well, which is always a good sign. I had the machine out of the box, read through the directions, and started brewing coffee in about 15 minutes. Wow. This was easily the best coffee I had ever tasted, with none of the bitterness I usually associate with espresso (at least with espresso I've made).

The machine produces four different beverages: espresso, "regular" coffee, caffe lungo, and hot water. (Caffe lungo, as it turns out, is literally "coffee long" and is similar to espresso, but with more water passed through for a longer brew time. While I'd never heard of it, it's now my wife's new morning beverage.) There's also the frothing wand and the cappuccinatore, which is an attachment that replaces the frothing wand specifically for cappuccino. While others have mentioned never using the cappuccinatore, it's all I've used so far and I've converted at least two strict coffee drinkers to cappuccino lovers.

My second (after the cost) biggest concern was that I'd been told that super automatics are a pain to clean and that it would be more hassle than it's worth. As it turns out, the Titanium's not the hard to clean. The dregdrawer (which holds the "hockey pucks" as my friend calls them) sits inside the drip tray, which easily slides out after you unlatch the door. The Titanium's blue display will let you know when it's time to empty the drip drawer. (It's not clever enough to know if you empty the dregdrawer in between these warnings, but if you empty it on your own schedule, you simply pull out the drawer for 5 seconds and slide it back in.) For the drip tray, there's a red plastic float that rises up as the tray fills to let you know that it's time to empty the tray.

The most difficult part to clean, which isn't all that hard, is the brewunit, which processes the coffee as it comes out of the grinder (or from the ground coffee slot, if you choose to use your own ground coffee). You have to unscrew a couple stainless steel plates and brush the unit (with an included brush). In short, cleaning a super automatic is no more of a chore than cleaning the separate appliances (coffee grinder and drip/espresso maker). One minor annoyance is mentioned on an orange sheet packed in the box that says that "oily" beans can clog the grinder and there's an 800 number to call for suggestions.

The only problem that I've had is that the beans (Starbuck's Caffe Verona) don't fall into the grinder properly and so every few cups the Titanium reports that the beans are empty even when there are beans in the hopper. Reaching into the hopper and pushing the beans around fixes that problem, but the rep at the 800 number reports that the oily beans will cause a buildup in the grinder and offered to send instructions on how to clean the grinder, should that become a problem. (It hasn't been for me yet, but I've only had the Titanium for a week and a half.) The suggestion I got from the 800 number was to let the beans sit on a baking sheet for an hour or so before adding them to the hopper and while this hasn't eliminated the problem of the non-empty hopper, it has reduced it.

One more tip: if you don't have a grinder, consider buying one (I bought the KitchenAid KPCG100NP Pro Line Burr Coffee Grinder, Nickel Pearl from Amazon and have been very happy with it). Sometimes (especially in the evenings, I've had requests for decaf and I'd rather not try to empty the bean hopper and grinder. Instead, you can add a scoop of ground coffee and press the "pre-ground coffee" button to tell the Titanium to use your ground coffee rather than grinding it fresh. (I suppose you could also buy already ground coffee, but if you're already spending over $1,000 on a coffee maker, what's a grinder?)

The bottom line: if you spend more than a few bucks a day on coffee, you can justify the cost and you'll wind up with great coffee. I suppose it's some measure of how much we enjoy the coffee that with three coffee drinkers, we've brewed just over 120 "coffees" (an espresso shot-sized measure of all three coffee products) in ten days. There's no question that this is a 5-star product.

Buy Gaggia 90500 Titanium Super Automatic Espresso Machine, Silver Now

this is my second fully automatic espresso machine; my first was saeco magic that was retired after it began to incessantly leak. i knew that saeco and gaggia were the same company, and the saeco served me well for nearly 9 years with no service whatsoever (although it was a minor repair i found out later) but i wanted to get a newer, more attractive machine, so i spent time looking into this gaggia.

i actually didn't purchase this machine here, but on ebay, but in the past year the price has gone done so you would do best to get it here. the machine i bought on ebay was brand new, unopened (and at the same price they sell it here) and with factory warranty. this is a beautiful piece of equipment, but if you need to save money, the gaggia titanium (without the SS suffix) is $200 cheaper and identical, just doesn't have the stainless steel side panels.

i gave it only 4 stars as it exhibited "issues" just 3 days out of warranty; it appeared to have started leaking. after a quick search into "authorized" repair centers and reading through the nightmares of some people, i found a local repair shop that was able to fix the issue in under a week. apparently, a fitting for the steam boiler was malformed, causing it to leak. the issue was fixed quickly (and for less than $100) and since then, the machine has been making dozens of cups of espresso a day!

the espresso is rich and HOT (being able to set the temperature on this unit is a great thing that a LOT of units don't have) and cleanup is fairly simple. i haven't had the "ventilate" issue that i have seen others write about here. one annoying feature, is that the energy saving feature REQUIRES that you set a turn on/turn off time. and every time the unit turns on, it uses some of the water in the tank to rinse the brew group. normally, not a big issue, but since the water is drained into the pan beneath the unit, you DO have to remember to empty it. while this unit is SO smart...it doesn't know when the pan is full (save for a pathetic little manual indicator) and if you aren't careful, you may end up with murky coffee water all over the place! if you use your machine as often as i use mine (daily), you'll make a note to empty the drain pain every couple of days.

occasionally, the machine will report that the dregdrawer (where the used grounds are deposited) is full, when it actually isn't. best thing is to just empty it and replace the drawer...everything works fine.

i didn't use the wild looking frothing accessory...the actual metal frother that you see on the front of the unit works wonderfully, is easy to clean, and best of all, since the unit has 2 boilers, there's no waiting between brewing espresso and steaming milk...it does dispense nice HOT water as well...

and lastly...the grinder. i know that some people have had issues with it not feeding the coffee properly; this is mainly when the machine is new. once the oil from the beans have lubricated the unit, it is less of a problem. although i found a tip online that said to remove the small cap over the grinder (just try not to stick your fingers in when it's on). i did this to my unit, and have rarely had a problem since...

all in all, a great unit. expensive, but when you weigh it out, i've made over 1000 cups of espresso in this machine in the past year. at starbucks, that would have been anywhere from $2500-4000...so it paid for itself in short order :)

addendum: a year later and 1000 cups more and still going strong! no further issues with leakage. make SURE you decalcify the unit per manual instructions...with over 2400 cups made you can only imagine the money saved at the coffee shop :) i highly reccommend lavazza super crema beans for this machine...

Read Best Reviews of Gaggia 90500 Titanium Super Automatic Espresso Machine, Silver Here

I should've known better. I initially purchased a Gaggia Titanium SS for myself because of Gaggia's supposed excellence in the espresso device market. I'll have to admit, the machine looks beautiful and when it works its awesome. However, after about 2-3 months of use, the machine started to leak in the inside upper-right corner. Puddles and puddles of water on my countertop! If that weren't enough, the increased humidity and steam from leakage caused the digital display to appear distorted and fuzzy! If that weren't enough, I keep on getting a "Close Door" message even though the door is closed! I'm not finished! The grinder adjustment knob doesn't work! I have the grind set at the finest setting and I'm getting coarse coffee grinds!

I called Importika to get this machine serviced and spoke to a "Sally" who takes care of service related issues. After 1 month of emailing and phone calls, "Sally" never gave me a "Return Authorization" which is required for machine to be sent back. She just ignored me. I gave up on this company and decided to get it fixed at a different company.

Save your money! Get a different brand! Do your research!

Want Gaggia 90500 Titanium Super Automatic Espresso Machine, Silver Discount?

I purchased this machine in February 2011. I share it with 5 co-workers to make our espressos at the office. Our average usage is around 15 runs per work day. We clean and flush the machine regularly, descale when the machine prompts for it.

Before this we had a Saeco Vienna and used it for 4 years before it died. We decided to try out a different brand and went with the Gaggia Titanium.

The machine makes good espresso. It was able to produce 3154 shots in 10 months.

The milk frother was not that good. The steam was often not very strong or was bursty. You also have to let it run 15-20 seconds every time before it starts producing steam instead of water.

The machine looks nice in the picture, but the plastic material got me worried when I opened the box the first time. It is flimsy and thin and does not look like something that can handle serious use. It is also entirely made of plastic inside and out.

Once we started using it plastic started to peel off from the bottom of the drip tray. The plastic could not handle the hot water, but this was not causing a major problem.

The sensors of the machine are not good. The producer tried to provide electronic "features", but in my opinion this was a shot in the foot.

Every so often the machine will recognize that water needs to be filled into the tank. You can't just fill water while the tank is attached, the machine will not recognize this and will not reset the sensor. You also can't detach the tank and fill it quickly and attach it back. You have to fill it and 'wait' for about a minute. There must be a timer that needs to run out before you put the tank back in place.

Every other week the machine displays the message 'Ventilate' and waits for you to prime it with water. The reasons for this are not obvious. Apparently the most frequent cause is an air bubble that gets into the pump.

We dread this moment and only me and another co-worker were able to develop the expertise to handle this situation without resetting the machine to factory settings. The instructions in the manual are of no use so we had to consult a video on youtube that is posted by the owner of the importer company Todd Salzman:

We had to prime and re-prime a number of times, we would usually spend around 20 minutes doing this until the message disappears, there is water all over the counter, etc..

We had to decalcify the machine 3 times. We bought a product and did it. The final step of the process is to run hot water through the machine until it stops displaying the rinse message. We would run water for more than an hour and nothing would change. In two cases we gave up and reset the machine to factory settings. In the third case we were somehow able to persist and see the message disappear.

After 10 months of use the machine stopped running coffee through the nozzles and was leaking the water from the back right side. Time to open the warranty card. Turns out the importer and service company is called Importika. Later research showed that Importika and WholeLatteLove.com are part of the Salzman Group owned by Todd Salzman.

I called Importika and spoke to a friendly young person. After inquiring about the issue he determined that the machine has to be sent for repair, but no problem machine is under 1 year warranty and will be serviced for free. There is no local service or pick up of any kind with this company. He would send me a shipping label in the email within a day.

Nothing comes within 3 days, I go on vacation and return. 10 days after the first call I call again to ask about the label. Turns out I was speaking with an intern and nothing is entered in the system. Well, at least I can reach the company. This time we get everything entered. The procedure changes slightly and from free warranty things change to me having to pay for shipment both ways. They take my credit card number, which will be charged only after service for the return shipment ($39). I have to take care of the shipment to them (still unknown amount).

On the next day I receive an email with instructions on draining the machine, packaging, address to send to. Lots of disclaimers that Importika is not responsible for any damages, loss, etc...

I package the machine as good as I can. I use lots of bubble wrap, foam we are an IT department and have lots of padding from other shipments.

I ship the machine with UPS and it arrives 2 days later (I track) ($39, own packaging, no insurance UPS will not warrant insurance on packages packaged by customer). 2 days nothing happens and then I receive an email with the subject 'Importika Receipt of Merchandise Damaged'. The email is generic it has my name, order number, UPS tracking number and phone numbers of the claim departments of all known carriers. They recommend that I file a claim with the carrier and, once the claim is processed and I decide how to proceed, they would be happy to provide an estimate ($45) to repair my machine.

I call Importika and they say that the entire front panel is broken and the issue is between me and UPS since I am the shipper.

From sending a machine for 'free' warranty service I move on to filing a damage claim and preparing to pay $45 for an estimate.

I file a claim with UPS and hear nothing for 3-4 days. When I call UPS they tell me the claim is under investigation. On the fifth day I go to track my package and see that it is out for delivery in my direction.

The store where I shipped it from also received a fax stating that UPS determined that the damage is not caused during transportation. It also states that the packaging did not pass the 'standard ISTA 3A test'.

I receive the package and open it it contains an unrecognizable pile of plastic total damage. Importika is conveniently not involved in any of this.

I try to go over the packaging in my mind and see what I did wrong as I tend to believe that UPS has handled the package like any other package and did not drop it from the third floor and then run over it with their truck. I put lots of padding, the box was big enough, not too big. I removed any parts from the machine that were not required for the service (drip tray, dregs drawer, water reservoir). The email with instructions stated that these should be removed to prevent damage. I think though that removing the drip tray helped the front panel collapse under its own weight during transport vibration, who knows..

Long story short we lost a machine under warranty to total damage. The conclusions (for us):

This machine is not robust. The materials are cheap and once taken out of the package the machine should not be moved too much.

If you don't have the original packaging it will be very difficult to package the machine in a way that will survive shipping.

There is no local service. When the machine breaks you will have to ship it to Importika/WholeLatteLove and assume full responsibility for it to arrive safe. If you have to do this I recommend to have it packaged by the carrier or an authorized service and insure it (you might still go through a hell to get your money upon damage though). This will probably run you around $70 $80. Then add the return shipment of $39. At the very least you will pay 1/8 of the machine price when you enjoy the free warranty service.

When the machine is out of warranty you will have to pay $45 fee for a repair estimate. Per their email a 'Tune-Up' is $140, so estimate for yourself how much real repair and spare parts will be.

Frequent outages and trial and error fumbling due to sensor issues will be a problem and will force you to learn a lot more about the machine's internal operations than you wanted to know.

If you make anywhere more than 1-2 coffees per day this machine might not last you very long. Not saying it won't but chances are high that it will start leaking or develop other problems. Having it survive service after this is a matter of luck.

Salzman Group, Importika and WholeLatteLove.com are the same company. They try to create an illusion of a competitive market by selling the same products at different prices on amazon, wholelattelove.com and other online stores. The service they provide is not adequate, but they will talk to you nicely.

When it comes to espresso machines in this price range we have decided to always buy from a local store where we can put the machine in our car and take it there for service if needed.

Never again Gaggia.

Save 30% Off