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07-17-2009, 01:18 PM | #21 | |
I barely grok the obvious
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Re: What is a very good Espresso machine
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Good luck with microfoam. The Oscar steamer scared the snork out of me for about a week. A couple of gallons later things come together like the hot kiss at the end of a wet fist - small pitcher half full, 10-15 seconds, smooth like silk, do it with your eyes closed.
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07-19-2009, 06:42 PM | #22 | |
Still not Adjusted
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Re: What is a very good Espresso machine
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Now that I am not vibrating with 10 double shots I can calmly say I concur. Tomorrow morning I will fire up the 4 cupper moka you gave to me add some foam and a tid bit of the milk. To be honest I never made a cap with the moka. I really just fire up a couple of pots of the 6 cupper and pour it down my throat, the only side effect is the strange places hair grows on me. Oscar and steam, wow, what a beast. Here is what the first few attempts of steaming 5oz of milk went like. turn knob to flush wand, ouch, that's gonna leave a mark, turn steam off. insert tip in pitcher, turn steam on, hold on for dear life, 6 seconds pass, ouch this is hot, drop pitcher, 175 f milk everywhere, steam from wand hitting me while trying to get pitcher, ouch as I grab the wand on the non protected metal, turn steam off. Drink double shot and try and get 2 year old to stop repeating the string of words she just heard. Start over while listening to the little angle screams profanities at the top of her lungs in the backyard. The only improvement was not dropping the pitcher the rest stayed the same till I ran out of milk. By the second gallon I wasn't burning myself at all and the hot milk didn't have skin on top. Still can't do 4 ozs but can do 6 pretty darn well and the burns have healed nicely. |
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07-20-2009, 08:40 AM | #23 |
crazy diamond
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Re: What is a very good Espresso machine
I still have periodic explosions from turning the steam wand on too strong and have to duck from the plastic piece or hot milk. Tricky business and messy cleanup that microfoam is, and there is no sound quite like the plastic piece shooting off into the metal pitcher and the scream that comes from hot milk in your eyes.
The main things I have learned are: 1. Keep everything perfectly clean and descale monthly. 2. Leave the fancy latte art to the barristas. 3. Practice makes perfect. 4. If you steam the milk first, then pull the shots. the milk settles down into a nice foam. 5. Keep a rag close to the operation. 6. Don't take it personally if your wife and kids laugh at you.
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"If we weren't all crazy we would go insane" |
07-20-2009, 10:01 AM | #24 |
Still not Adjusted
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Re: What is a very good Espresso machine
Really? Is your water that hard that you need to do this?
I choose not to use bottled water but with a brita filter that gets used only for 3 weeks before going to just drinking water my water comes down to where I should need to only descale 1 a year. A true descale cleaning is a PIA so if I had to do it 1 a month I would switch to buying softer water. |
07-20-2009, 12:22 PM | #26 |
Still not Adjusted
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Re: What is a very good Espresso machine
So are you just running citric acid through the water reservoir till the boiler fills, flushing till you get it through the system,then letting it sit, then flushing till clean?
or Tricking the boiler to overfill with water and citric acid and draining the boiler after it sat hot for awhile then flushing group head and wand and guts with more citric acid? The problem with hard water and scale build up in the boiler is the scale collects above the water line so it doesn't get removed with first procedure. |
07-20-2009, 12:41 PM | #27 | |
I barely grok the obvious
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Re: What is a very good Espresso machine
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Oscar steam gets easy with practice. I recall removing cooked-on spatters of boiled scalded milk from the machine, floor, counter, clothes, walls, stove, eyeglasses and ceiling. With a small pitcher for one drink I maybe use half the pressure to stretch it out to microfoam over 15-seconds; to slow time down start with steel pitcher/milk chilled, direct from fridge or freezer. If you don't bother with a thermometer figure when the pitcher becomes too hot to hold barehanded you've hit about 130*F - time is getting short when you can't barehand the pitcher, right? And your nose tells the rest. I pull an electrical lead on mine when descaling and, after soaking, pump what little crud there is out thru the wand. I have well water and a 5-mic filter - tastes great and doesn't leave much in the boiler during 1/annual descale. DO remove the tip before pumping the boiler out that way. DO change the dispersion screen screw out with a phillips, torx or (preferably) allen drive machine screw and DEFINITELY clean the screen and brass heat sink regularly or you will have bitter/skunky espresso. Treat the dispersion screw threads with a light swipe of Vaseline before reinstalling it and only loosen it when the machine is cold. Backflush slowly/regularly with a spoonful or Urnex in the blank basket.
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"I hope you had the time of your life." Last edited by Mister Moo; 07-20-2009 at 12:50 PM. |
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07-20-2009, 01:47 PM | #28 | |
Still not Adjusted
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Re: What is a very good Espresso machine
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I have the whole aloe vera plant in my kitchen. I have a knack for burning myself so I cut some off and tape it on the burn(s) as needed. Thanks for the info on the dispersion screen. Is not taking the screw out hot for me or is it bad for the threads? I tried some water out of the group head after a bunch of shots where pulled and the machine had sat for a while, very nasty stuff and brown. I like to backflush after shots if I know I won't be having another for a while, it is amazing what flows out each time. How often do you backflush with detergent? |
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07-20-2009, 04:12 PM | #29 | |
I barely grok the obvious
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Re: What is a very good Espresso machine
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Backflush: start with a hot machine. Add a teaspoon or so of CleanCaf, Urnex (whatever floats your boat) and some hot water to the PF with a blank basket and stir it up for a few seconds as if to dissolve some of it. Keeping the basket rim clean and level, seat it firmly in the grouphead. Take out the drip pan grate and then hit the brew button "ON" until the pump goes quiet then "OFF". Repeat the process a few times until you're satisfied the Urnex and water have worked all the way thru the solenoid and are draining into the drip pan. Let it sit for a few hours then do the ON/OFF thing a few more times until it drains clean. Remove the pf from the grouphead, wash it off and repeat without the Urnex until nothing but clean water is showing in the drip pan as you cycle the brew pump "ON" and "OFF". Oscar note: if you run brew water and do the "portafilter wiggle" back and forth from loose to snug (to rinse grounds off) you may end up seizing the pf into the grouphead. Doing the wiggle can force water under the grouphead gasket, and, later, make it very had to free up a snugged pf without a lot of muscle. Run brew water over a pf to clean it or heat it up but don't lock- or gently snug it into the grouphead while the pump is on.
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"I hope you had the time of your life." |
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07-20-2009, 04:56 PM | #30 |
crazy diamond
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Re: What is a very good Espresso machine
Great info. I unscrew the screen regularly and clean but was warned to NEVER backflush a Gaggia, so I haven't tried.
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"If we weren't all crazy we would go insane" |
07-20-2009, 05:25 PM | #31 |
Still not Adjusted
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Re: What is a very good Espresso machine
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07-21-2009, 09:59 AM | #32 |
crazy diamond
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Re: What is a very good Espresso machine
My Gaggia has the 3 way solenoid but they insist it will kill the pump if you backflush. Not sure, but not taking any chances.
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"If we weren't all crazy we would go insane" Last edited by floydpink; 07-21-2009 at 10:06 AM. |
07-21-2009, 10:16 AM | #33 |
Still not Adjusted
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Re: What is a very good Espresso machine
I do remember someone asking this at CG and there gaggia saying not to backflush yet they include backflush cleaner in the new shipments. I will keep my eyes open for more info and get it to you if I find it.
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07-21-2009, 01:13 PM | #34 | |
Still not Adjusted
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Re: What is a very good Espresso machine
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from their gaggia pagehttp://www.sweetmarias.com/prod.gaggia.php. |
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07-21-2009, 04:32 PM | #35 |
crazy diamond
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Re: What is a very good Espresso machine
well, if someone could explain the benefit of backflushing opposed to a good cleaning and descaling, I might try to figure it out.
I guess I am under the impression that as long as my machine is performing great, like it is, I'm leaving it alone. Edit: Never mind, my OCD got the best of me and I just ordered a blind filter from WLL and will be backflushing. How often is this normally done??? Last question: I keep quite a good supply of Urnex Dezcale around. Is this the right stuff to use on a backflush??
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"If we weren't all crazy we would go insane" Last edited by floydpink; 07-21-2009 at 04:46 PM. |
07-21-2009, 06:00 PM | #36 | |
Still not Adjusted
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Re: What is a very good Espresso machine
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The Urnex Dezcale is not what you want to use but Urnex makes other products designed for backflushing. Not sure they are that different since I believe they all use citric acid in different proportions. Joe Glow seems to be the mildest of the detergents and I might try some of that out but right now I use Urnex tabs right now once a week, thats a lie since I have done it twice in 9 days but my second cleaning came out very clean so I jumped the gun. A shop would do it every night, a real clean freak may also do it every night but once a week will keep things clean with hot water backflushes done often. I will post some links later on some more exact info. |
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07-21-2009, 06:38 PM | #37 |
Guest
Posts: n/a
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Re: What is a very good Espresso machine
I tried saving money on making home espresso before I pulled the trigger on a real set-up. Started with a 4 Cup Brikka (because I couldn't find a 2 Cup in the US) and a Zass Knee Mill. That worked out pretty good, and I was fooling myself that I was drinking espresso for a little while. Then I found a 2 Cup Brikka, which I found to be more consistent than the 4...and worked with that, again believing I was drinking true espresso.
But dammit...this interweb thing brings so much f'n information to you that the bug was still very much alive in me, and alas I began to figure out how much I was willing to spend. I budgeted $800 for a machine and grinder. I was targeting a Silvia/Rocky set-up...but as others chimed in, the little voice in the back of my head (the same one that tells me that I never have enough cigars, regardless if I have no place to store them) had me out shopping beyond my budget. Fortunately...I had my Zass Knee Mill, so I had a grinder that would keep up with the best of them (yes...that is a true statement). I didn't know anything about machines, but I had $800 to put towards one now. Gaggia was a name on the top of the list, but then I quickly learned of Expobar and heat exchange and single vs double boilers, blah, blah, blah... Long story short, I found an unused Livia 90 Semi Auto on craigslist for $800 and it got the blessing of all who had given me advise. Pair that with the Zass...and I was up and running...so I thought. Grinding espresso by hand is no joy at all...let me tell you. Especially when your first grind is typically a sink shot. I'm real big on tradition...but this wasn't doing it for me. Patience isn't a strong suit for me. I had an unexpected settlement come through at just the right time, and I sprung for a Macap M4 Stepless grinder. At the time I think I got it shipped for somewhere in the mid $500 range. Now...I could have some fun. Getting a good grinder is probably going to be the biggest determining factor as to whether you'll continue to make (or at least try) espresso at home, or hang it up after a few months. Seriously! Don't skimp on a grinder. It really is the biggest part of the process. I can typically nail my shots with no more than one sinker (stepless is the balls). As far as beans...I like Black Cat, Klatch's Belle Espresso (try this NOW!!!) and the stuff I pick up at Whole Foods. I'm seriously thinking of letting both of my Brikka's go since they're decoration on top of my fridge at the moment. A Brikka is the only way to really get a real decent espresso-like stovetop brew. Other moka's are good, but different. I'm such a mental case, that I even spent the money to have Pasquini send me the stainless drip tray for the Livia. OMG what a difference it made in appearance. After all...your works have to look good when they're just sitting there right? lol Might I suggest checking out the Coffeegeek Forum if you haven't found it already. |
07-21-2009, 08:48 PM | #38 | |
crazy diamond
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Re: What is a very good Espresso machine
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The New Baby does not have external tubes as your diagram suggests. the solenoid mounts to the group housing and has internal channels to the boiler and group (and below to drip). The solenoid on the new baby is easily clogged so the VERY minimal benefit that might be had from back flushing is not worthwhile in my opinion... I would prefer to run water forward through the group
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"If we weren't all crazy we would go insane" |
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07-21-2009, 09:22 PM | #39 |
crazy diamond
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Re: What is a very good Espresso machine
In any event, I ordered the blind filter and cleaner and will try backflushing.
It takes a bit of time, but I have found great benefits from taking off the shower screen and cleaning it by hand as well as sometimes taking out the two hex bolts and removing the group head, soaking it, and really giving the whole grouphead a good cleaning that I'm not sure a backflush will achieve. I have no idea about other machines, but after studying diagrams and getting out my tools, I am beginning to get very familiar with all the inner parts of the Gaggia.
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"If we weren't all crazy we would go insane" |
07-22-2009, 07:28 AM | #40 | |
I barely grok the obvious
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Re: What is a very good Espresso machine
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If Gaggia has a warning, be careful; you don't want hot acidic oils squirting into your eyeball. The Oscar has a baffle in the pan the prevents a direct squirt onto a nearby human.
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"I hope you had the time of your life." |
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