The Coffee Thread

Discussion in 'Lounge' started by Mac, Nov 28, 2019.

  1. [​IMG]
     
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  2. Dunno where my nearest Starbucks is -at least 10 miles away. I am not going out just to get a coffee!
     
  3. Are you kidding?
    Back in the day... I would have a coffee at home to get me to the coffee out so I could drive somewhere and meet someone for a coffee...

    Rex
     
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  4. Try 200 degrees in Nottingham.. :upyeah:
    Brazilian Love Affair.
     
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  5. Great name for a Rock band

    Rex
     
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  6. upload_2020-6-11_13-48-59.png
    Used for the first time, today. For a cheapy, I am quite happy with it!
     
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  7. Looks way more complicated than my Dualit machine, well done on purchase that man :upyeah:
     
  8. Any machine you can get in the red has got to be good.
     
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  9. It's quite simple, really. I never read instructions , but I can work it! Probably incorrectly, though!
     
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  10. James Hoffman, 2007 Barista World Champion and world reknowned coffee expert:

     
  11. Interesting, but I didn't agree. He thought the DeLonghi best, but that was one make that I did not want to buy. He did try mine and thought it alright but then it wasn't mentioned again. I don't think that mine was more than £100 but he was right (I just checked) as it was £97! Dunno what coffee he was using and maybe he has a much superior taste to me, but I don't GAF! I'm happy with mine. It's easy to use and clean and works really well. TBH, I'm quite glad that I am not on that high coffee plain that he is. I've spent less than £100 and I can make good Latte, espresso, and cappuccino:)
     
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  12. To be fair, he was using a £500 grinder (same as mine) to grind the beans. That made more of a difference to the taste than the machines he used. He probably wouldn't have even ranked any of them 'ok' if he hadn't been using it. As long as you're happy. Just be aware that you won't ever get a 'good' coffee until you spend over £500, so there's no point ever upgrading and spending less than that (unless you go into pourover/french press/aeropress and spend all the money on the grinder/specialty beans). I appreciate you're happy with what you've got.
     
  13. What grinder do you use and would you recommend it ?
     
  14. upload_2020-6-17_16-52-51.png

    So the 5 year old at the company meeting said you can afford to make you machines realy crap. Amazon won't care and most people only use their machines five times per year - so go for a design that will last five times. "Brilliant!", everybody exclaimed. "Do you think that you could bring your friends at primary school to give us more ideas?"

    I lie as the coffee machine failure was my fault! I did better when I put in the coffee holder in, properly!

    upload_2020-6-17_17-3-24.png
     
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  15. It's a Niche Zero and it's fantastic. It costs £500 but is widely regarded as the best sub-£1500 grinder that you can buy (brand new) though you can occasionally get other brand more expensive ones second hand (e.g. if a coffee shop gets a new grinder and sells off an old one on ebay). If you get into coffee, you'll soon discover that weighing the grinds and the output from the coffee machine is very important, along with the consistency of the grinds' size (you wan't them all the same as much as possible, which takes remarkable feats of engineering to achieve).

    The Niche is what they call a 'single dose' grinder i.e. you only put in the amount of beans you need for a single (or double/treble) shot of coffee and it grinds them there and then. It's special because it has almost zero retention (hence the name). It's the one Hoffman used in that video. You put 20g of beans in and you get 20g of grinds out (95%+ of the time and 19.9g out when you don't, so near enough). It took much more expensive grinders to do that before the Niche came along. The other special thing is that it can adjust from espresso size grinds to filter size ones quickly and easily (just turn a dial) and it does all the sizes in between at the same level of consistency. It makes tweaking your dial-in process very easy. Beans change as they age/get more stale so it's important to be able to tweak the size of the grinds for a consistent coffee shot (generally getting finer and finer until they're past their best).

    Of course, if you want to just have a whole bag of beans on hand there are plenty of grinders that have hoppers that you can just empty the bag into - but that's a different kettle of fish with different considerations (and you can't do single dosing on those without the grind size being very inconsistent).

    If you've got a budget and a type of grinder in mind, let me know and I can make suggestions. Generally speaking, though, you want to spend as much as you can on a grinder - it's really, really important - way more so than the coffee machine. As Hoffman proved, you can get an 'OK' coffee out of a cheap coffee machine with a great grinder, but you'd struggle to get an 'OK' coffee, even out of a £10,000 coffee machine, with a cheap grinder.
     
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  16. Were you aiming for a cappucino? The milk foam looks very large (like it has too much air in it).

    [​IMG]
     
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  17. Do you also write for What HiFi Magazine? :bucktooth:
     
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  18. I do make it quite foamy. I'm experimenting (and enjoying it!).
     
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  19. Noobie has it almost right, two spoons of this mofo with one cup, two girls are an optional extra I shall decline! :upyeah::cool:
     
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