It's not free. Your employer pays for it, which, in turn means they have less money to pay its employees, meaning less money for you.Nope, it's free at work so why pay for it when work does?
Well, the alternative way to phrase it would be "I accept the payment offered by my employer" as opposed to "I told them to keep their money".It's not free. Your employer pays for it, which, in turn means they have less money to pay its employees, meaning less money for you.
Does it ever get cleaned/maintained?My office has an espresso machine that makes coffee but it's really not good, even when we get decent beans, it still tastes mild. Does anyone make their own coffee at work and if so, what equipment do you have?
I cleaned it out this weekend and changed all the filters but it still tastes the same. I think it boils down to the machine being an espresso machine, not a coffee machine. When it brews coffee it grinds the beans and then produces a very frothy cup of coffee.I have a "5 cup" coffee maker on my desk, in a regular coffee mug it's about 2.5 cups.
Does it ever get cleaned/maintained?
Ah, I didn't realize you were describing a dual brewing machine.I cleaned it out this weekend and changed all the filters but it still tastes the same. I think it boils down to the machine being an espresso machine, not a coffee machine. When it brews coffee it grinds the beans and then produces a very frothy cup of coffee.
I dont understand how do you make your own coffee at work? Do you carry your own coffee machine like a hipster?
