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Re: Mokapots, Moka, or Stovetop Espresso, Period.
So after 15+ years of moka pot using I bought a Brikka. :al
I will say this, it not the same as a moka pot, so until I can make this widget sing I have no opinion. |
Re: Mokapots, Moka, or Stovetop Espresso, Period.
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I would value your opinion on the performance compared to Bialetti Express. What size did you get, btw? |
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It is different and is tough to put side by side with a moka pot. The entire brew process is only 5 secs long compared to 30 secs in a moka pot so it doesn't have the developed flavors which I am so accustomed to. The challenge now is to work with the amount of bean and grind size since the pressure is predetermined by the widget (a weight that blocks the spout). I have already found vast differences from the cups made with 20g-30g and the grind from what I use on the aluminum moka pot and what I use in the Stainless pot. It was suggested by someone to try even coarser grind with less bean, so there is much to play with. I find it difficult to view the Brikka as different from a moka pot but the results I have had so far suggest it is a brew method of it's own. |
Re: Mokapots, Moka, or Stovetop Espresso, Period.
Why did I click on this thread? Looks like I'm going shopping soon. :)
Thanks for all the great info...hopefully it is as easy as you all make it sound! :r |
Re: Mokapots, Moka, or Stovetop Espresso, Period.
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Bialeti sove top.
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Re: Mokapots, Moka, or Stovetop Espresso, Period.
I had the god shot out of my moka pot last night. Trying to choke the machine with fine grind and no tamp brought out the syrupy sweetness in a fresh roasted Rwanda blend from whole foods. Can't wait to get home for another drink :)
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What can I say? Choke the bastard (almost). :D |
Re: Mokapots, Moka, or Stovetop Espresso, Period.
Some say to use a very slightly rounded top of fine coffee and that is enough tamp when it is screwed down. I usually just make it flat like measuring flour.
I hardly ever use my moka pots. I use to like 10 years ago, but just got bored with them. |
Re: Mokapots, Moka, or Stovetop Espresso, Period.
I picked up the Bialetti Moka 3 cup and some espresso ground coffee from Starbucks (was the closest thing to Bed Bath and Beyond to get coffee and try it out). Overall, It was a pleasant first experience. The only thing that I don't like is that it simply makes too much. It makes about 4-5 full double espresso cups. With this one, I'm going to be wasting almost half every day which isn't very cost effective. They didn't carry the 1 cup unfortunately. I may order the 1 cup online, that is unless I can put less water and coffee into the 3 cup? Could I fill it half way with water and coffee or is that a no go?
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Re: Mokapots, Moka, or Stovetop Espresso, Period.
I filled it with about 1/2-3/4 of an inch less water and not as much grounds and ended up getting roughly 2 double shots worth which is good. I think I'll stick with the 3 cup, maybe pick up a one cup down the line.
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Re: Mokapots, Moka, or Stovetop Espresso, Period.
nooberific question here... sorry i'm kinda new to the coffee love world...
so moka = expresso brika = Brikka is a modified moka pot by Bialetti Can someone please explain what the express and mukka does? Thanks |
Re: Mokapots, Moka, or Stovetop Espresso, Period.
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espresso = way-strong coffee made under high (9bar+) pressure usually generated by an electric pump. Bialetti Express is a plain old normal conventional mokapot. http://fantes.com/images/espresso_stovetop.gif from http://fantes.com/espresso-stovetop.html Brikka is a mokapot that has a pressure retention device atop the central column (post) that relives the operator of creating the necessary pressure (to make moka) by carefully managing the grind of the coffee and the fill of the basket. |
Re: Mokapots, Moka, or Stovetop Espresso, Period.
if i get a mukka.. i don't have to add milk do i? if i just want coffee?
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My wife brought one of these home, but we can't get it to work. It creates steam, but no coffee comes out of the top.
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http://base0.googlehosted.com/base_m...713728992P.JPG That sounds disappointing. Never heard of a problem with a Mukka or Brikka. |
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Your time and testing would be greatly apprecaited :) |
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just wanted to follow this up mr moo... any news?
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Re: Mokapots, Moka, or Stovetop Espresso, Period.
I made four Americanos from different sized Mukkas; results were essentially identical, large pot or small. The quality of the cup is highly dependent on the quality of the coffee. Due to circumstances I am drinking commercial "First Colony" Costa Rican whole bean from Williamsburg, VA, this week. Being kind, it is slightly above average commercial. I tried some regular moka in a Bialetti Express with it last week and it was flat, too.
Mukka instructions say to use milk only in the top pot. I subbed water and ran the machine as per cappuccino. All four pots tasted the same; less water in the north pot might have made a little difference. Milk and sugar added in the cup still left it tasting like McDonalds coffee with milk and sugar. Not bad. Not good. Basically, it made a marginal americano using marginal fresh-ground coffee. I am certain freshly roasted coffee, freshly ground to espresso fineness, would have made a decent americano. A Mukka without proper grind would be wasted; Bustelo from the can would probably work as well as this mornings First Colony. http://i39.tinypic.com/6zuhq0.jpg http://i44.tinypic.com/j5gi9s.jpg Mom moved in last year (she's 97) and, although she really likes good coffee, she occupies a lot of my (former) spare time; a problem exchange student from Belgium moved in last January; and I developed a pinched nerve in my neck two weeks ago. I REALLY want to roast some coffee but it's gonna be at least two more weeks before I get around to it. When I do, I'll try another Amukkacano. Absent good coffee I am sliding by on Percocet and water. Not all bad. :) |
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thank you so much for taking the time :) and pic!
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I will trade you some fresh roast for some Percocet, a Percocet makes a 1 months old cry sound like angles singing. I should still have your addy and I need to roast tomorrow so I will get some done for you and send it off, I hate to think about the poor Moo mug having stale coffee in it. Yup, I have your addy as long as it has not changed. |
Re: Mokapots, Moka, or Stovetop Espresso, Period.
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Never took a Percocet before last week; I gather this is (was?) the brand name of the Rush Limbaugh drug of deafness, etc. I am too old and poor to start a new career as a junkie and too busy to commence a yet another hobby so I am laying out on the narcotic thing. Not sure, firsthand anyhow, what the entertainment value of the pill is. Therapeutically speaking I am a big fan, though. After two weeks of sleep constantly interrupted by sensations or tingling, pressure and pain - the kind you can deal with in the daytime but it's just bad enough to bounce you from sound sleep - it was P'cet to the rescue. One at 10:00pm and I sleep pain free for at least six hours; it is quite the miracle. No side effects. Percocet, physical therapy, home traction and cortisone epidurals might do the trick but my neck is feeling like spinal fusion is in the future; don't think I can exercise my way out of this one. Coffee? I bought two 24-oz. bags of this First Colony brand two weeks ago - it's just being introduced here in NC and was on sale 2:1 at Food Lion and I thought, "How bad can it be?" And it is OK, for sure, and that's what Mrs. Moo and I have been drinking. I figured it would run out in three weeks or so and spare me needing to go out and roast beans for little while. Then Mrs. Moo comes home the other day with two bags of the same stuff and says, "Look! I found a great deal on a new brand of coffee! You can take a break from roasting!" So now there is another 48-oz. I am sick of the ****. It was OK for a week or so in a pinch but, mercy... I am accepting charitable contributions without discussion. Thx Germ. |
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I did 4 roasts 250g each for you and heading to the post office now, I hope it gets to you Saturday.
DC# 03051720000045014891 I hope you get well soon. |
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Thanks in advance from Mrs. Moo and me - very kind, Robbo. You makka me smile. ) |
Re: Mokapots, Moka, or Stovetop Espresso, Period.
so i picked up a electric mukka off ebay... works like a charm!
however the bottom portion has a bit of corrosion... i know its ok... but visually not appealing... what's the best way to clean it? |
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sorry it probably is calcification..
also there's a slight leak between the top and bottom when it starts to boil.. will a couple drops of mineral oil hurt ok? i think the coffee won't be affected cause mineral oil is tastless... |
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1. Mukka lower pots are round/large and hard to hold so be sure it's screwed down tightly - I use a rubber "jar opener" pad to get a good grip and a snug fit; 2. make sure threads and gasket are coffee-free before tightening; 3. make sure gasket is clean and pliable - replace a brittle or hardened gasket; 4. sometimes grounds get under a gasket making it impossible to flatten out. Pick it out carefully with a convenient large-animal dental tool and make sure nothing is trapped under it. If it feels rock-hard or brittle enough to crack when bending, replace it. |
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I wondered why you had that "large-animal" dental tool in your coffee supplies. Now I know.....:D
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Wife ran my Brikka through the dishwasher yesterday and now it's a doorstop. Do not do this if you have an aluminum pot and like it.
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Re: Mokapots, Moka, or Stovetop Espresso, Period.
added a couple of drops of mineral oil on the gasket.. no more leaks :)
going to try and make the ammericano tonight with some decaf |
Re: Mokapots, Moka, or Stovetop Espresso, Period.
For anyone with the 1-cup Bialetti Moka Express, does it really make enough for one cup or do you loose a lot of water to the grinds and residual in the boiler?
Also, anyone have the 2-cup model with the platform for the cups and the copper fill pipes to the cups rather than the upper caraffe tank? Does it work any different than the Moka Express with the tank? Can both of the nozzles be swiveled over to fill one cup? (this machine is only going to be for me, the 1cup seems small, the 3 would be too much) thanks. |
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Never used that bent-spigot double thingie; REI sells them and I keep thinking it'd be fun to try each time I'm in the store. Memory says I read some bad reviews on it a while back but I can't say that firsthand. A Bialetti Express 3-cup isn't so bad but you might want to cruise the net hard looking for an real 2x. Or get an AeroPress. |
Re: Mokapots, Moka, or Stovetop Espresso, Period.
or a Brikka - http://www.bialettishop.com/BrikkaMain.htm
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http://www.unclebeanz.com/merchant2/...egory_Code=DEC The Opus1 exotic is quite good and an interesting story. As I understand it, the Opus1 is actually a arabica bean genetically bred to be less than 1% caffeine. For decaf in general, I prefer coffee treated with the Swiss Water Method that doesn't require chemical solvents to remove the caffeine. In general there is no shortage of good decaf coffee from good roasters it just tends to cost more due to the extra processing. I do know some companies will use a lower quality of bean for their decaf to keep the price per pound the same as their caffeinated coffee. I did a lot of research on decaf as I got my wife hooked on coffee and then got her pregnant... twice and she wanted good quality decaf during her pregnancies. Even though I don't need to drink decaf after a cup or two of regular sometimes I still want coffee and having good decaf around is a nice thing. Quote:
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Yeah, the 2-cup pots seem to be pretty much non existant. So, Bialetti and Guzzini, any other manufacturers that are decent? Any that should best be avoided? The Aeropress and the mokapot seem to be very different in operation and principle to me. I was thinking that the mokapot would be more capable of producing what I was looking for, the aeropress is more of a coffee maker, correct? |
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AeroPress and mokapat are two ways to approach the taste of espresso without the $ investment or learning curve. I recently ran espresso (Nuova Simonelli Oscar), moka and AeroPress coffee from the same batch of beans and taste-tested them, side by side. The grinder was a Mazzer and the grind was specific to each coffeemaker. Tell you what - they were all different but not THAT different. Each was good in its own way; the AeroPress makes a VERY smooth espresso-like brew, by the way. Quote:
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Will the Aeropress work with the pre-ground espressos? Or is that too fine a grind? Lastly, how much coffee does each scoop hold? I saw someone on amazon write that each scoop is 3 tablespoons. Not teaspoons, but tablespoons. So to make 4 aeropress shots you need 3./4 cup of ground coffee??!?!? Quote:
Not really into lattes to be honest. |
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No need to address that question anymore as I measured what the size of the scoops are that I use in my B&D single cup drip machine each morning and they are 1 tablespoon scoops, maybe a bit more. I typically use three of them, three heaping scoops of them. |
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I sent my AeroPress off for someone to use and I can't recall the details it - except, it makes excellent coffee with med/fine grounds. fresher the better. |
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