- Jul 13, 2005
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I'm a pretty big fan of espresso, and I just got access to a machine to pull my own shots... but the shots I pulled were horrible - no crema, and very little flavour. Any resident ATOT coffee experts have any advice?
Originally posted by: darthsidious
Thanks for all the replies. The machine I'm using is a cheapo Black and Deker, so that's probably a big part of the problem. I'm fairly certain the beans aren't bad: It's a single origin espresso from Ehiopia that I've had at this coffee shop before, and really liked (It's the Addis Ketema Cooperative, Yirgacheffe, Ethiopia from terroircoffee.com if people want to check it out).
So I guess my question is, given my crappy machine, what's the best I can do; Is there a way to adjust grinds and tamping to compensate somewhat?
Thanks...
Edit: As for roast freshness, it was roasted on November 3. And the exact machine is Black and Decker's EM5
Originally posted by: Platypus
Don't forget also the way you're preparing them? How long of a pull did you do? How much did you tamp down the espresso in the wand?
Originally posted by: h8red
I really think the problem is the grinder. The "espresso machine" will probably make acceptable coffee once you get a good grinder and good fresh beans. The beans really should be no older than 2 weeks after roasting otherwise they aren't as fresh and will not produce crema.
I know this may sound ridiculous to a lot of people reading this but I think a good starting point would be to get a Rocky doserless $285. This grinder should last you a few years until you get obsessed and upgrade to the Mazzer Mini electric!!
I can't stress enough that the grinder is probably the most important part of making espresso. A close second is the fresh beans, and a distant third is the actual espresso machine
Originally posted by: everman
Originally posted by: Platypus
Don't forget also the way you're preparing them? How long of a pull did you do? How much did you tamp down the espresso in the wand?
25-30 seconds for 1.5-2oz of espresso.
Use a real tamper (not the plastic junk machines come with), it's estimated about 30lbs of force. Personally I never used a scale, I just stay consistent with the amount of force applied. The only adjustment you should make is that of the grind, everything else stays the same. Grind finer to increase shot time, coarser for a quicker shot. It's pretty simple, but it does take some practice.
Originally posted by: Descartes
Originally posted by: h8red
I really think the problem is the grinder. The "espresso machine" will probably make acceptable coffee once you get a good grinder and good fresh beans. The beans really should be no older than 2 weeks after roasting otherwise they aren't as fresh and will not produce crema.
I know this may sound ridiculous to a lot of people reading this but I think a good starting point would be to get a Rocky doserless $285. This grinder should last you a few years until you get obsessed and upgrade to the Mazzer Mini electric!!
I can't stress enough that the grinder is probably the most important part of making espresso. A close second is the fresh beans, and a distant third is the actual espresso machine
I agree with everything else you said, and I know it's popular to say the machine isn't all that important; however, a steam toy will always be a steam toy, and no matter what quality the grind or beans you'll simply never get a true espresso that you get from a machine capable of ~9 bars.
