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Reply to: Bean to cup

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Previously on "Bean to cup"

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  • RedSauce
    replied
    Originally posted by Halo Jones View Post
    Blue Mountain is a great coffee – just be careful you are getting the actual thing, worldwide more coffee is sold a Jamaican Blue Mountain than is actually produced. It is best done in a cafetiere as the flavour is not suited to the high heat of machines
    Coffee fraud (who would have thought) - I hadn't heard of it until last year when my mum brought me some back from Jamaica. When that ran out i bought some from whittard (very expensive) but have just got a lb of it from a friend returning from Jamaica. Unfortuantely it doesn't keep for long.

    Leave a comment:


  • MaryPoppins
    replied
    Originally posted by norrahe View Post
    Sorry to hijack but any recommendations for a decent compact grinder?
    try www.coffeeforums.co.uk

    Leave a comment:


  • MaryPoppins
    replied
    Originally posted by NickFitz View Post
    I bet 999 people in a 1000 can't tell the difference between coffee made by a fancy expensive machine, and that made from a few beans ground up and chucked in a £10 cafetiere from Sainsbury's.
    I don't like to disagree with you Nickeroo, but on this occasion I do! I'm no coffee purist, but I do struggle to find a decent cup.

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  • DimPrawn
    replied
    Are you lot overcomplicating things?

    Buy beans.

    Put in this

    Buy De

    Then put the ground coffee into something like this:

    Kenwood UK | Black Coffee Maker kMix CM024

    What else is there to it?

    Leave a comment:


  • MaryPoppins
    replied
    Originally posted by Halo Jones View Post
    We have this one, it’s a bit over your stated budget but if the other Delonghi machines are half as good then I can recommend the brand.

    A few things to consider with B2C machines:

    If you like your coffee hot you will be disappointed with the cappuccino / latte as the milk just doesn’t get up to the temperature you may be used to from machines with steamers (such as the Gaggia)

    Get one that has a pre-ground container you can then use this for decaff: it saves having to try & empty the beans out..

    Look at the milk container, be sure that the spout that goes into the base unit is not metal – if you keep the container in the fridge the metal may shrink in the cold & this can cause connection issues.

    You will need to descale on a regular basis, if you don’t it can bung up the mechanism; descaling is an easy process but get the proper Delonghi fluid.
    Thank you! I only drink espresso/americano [re: the hot issue]. I guess I should consider guests may want something different, but I care about that much less than the ability to make myself a very good, strong, coffee.

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  • amcdonald
    replied
    Originally posted by DimPrawn View Post
    Is this a porn thing?
    Nah I think he meant Kopi Luwak, AKA Cat Butt Coffee

    Leave a comment:


  • Halo Jones
    replied
    Originally posted by RedSauce View Post
    I would strongly recommend buying some Blue Mountain coffee, it is like nothing i have ever had before, it is so smooth and doesn't have that bitter taste that some coffee can have.
    Blue Mountain is a great coffee – just be careful you are getting the actual thing, worldwide more coffee is sold a Jamaican Blue Mountain than is actually produced. It is best done in a cafetiere as the flavour is not suited to the high heat of machines

    Leave a comment:


  • DimPrawn
    replied
    Originally posted by Gibbon View Post

    Having being down the anal bean to cup route..
    Is this a porn thing?

    Leave a comment:


  • Gibbon
    replied
    Originally posted by norrahe View Post
    I was looking into a nespresso machine, but the pods are stupidly expensive. I would like a bean to cup machine and was looking at Jura and de Longhi, but I only drink coffee at home at the weekends, so will probably invest in a coffee grinder and stick to using a cafetiere.
    I agree that Nespresso is expensive by weight, but it makes up for it by convenience, minimal cleaning and maintenance required. Also like you I only drink it on a weekend and I was forever throwing away stale coffee making it actually more expensive. Yes you can grind your own, but after doing this myself I would say it’s nugatory effort for no better coffee and again another cleaning task. I can make two decent cups and be cleaned away by the time the toast is done. Also I like strong coffees whilst the wife likes hers milder which again is easy with pods.

    Having being down the anal bean to cup route, I honestly think unless you are making as much as a small coffee bar it’s not worth the extra effort.

    Leave a comment:


  • norrahe
    replied
    Sorry to hijack but any recommendations for a decent compact grinder?

    Leave a comment:


  • RedSauce
    replied
    I looked at doing the same thing, but it worked out so expensive for something I would only use at weekends. So i bought a grinder of Amazon and a Cafetiere. As long as you use decent coffee it is just as good as any machine IMO.

    I would strongly recommend buying some Blue Mountain coffee, it is like nothing i have ever had before, it is so smooth and doesn't have that bitter taste that some coffee can have.

    Leave a comment:


  • Pondlife
    replied
    I keep seeing these pop up. They seem to be v. popular at the moment. Not sure I can be bothered with the faffing about.

    Originally posted by norrahe View Post
    so will probably invest in a coffee grinder and stick to using a cafetiere.
    This is pretty much it for me. Buy decent beans, whack 'em in a grinder until medium, then bung into a std filter coffee machine or cafetiere.

    Leave a comment:


  • norrahe
    replied
    Originally posted by Gibbon View Post
    Trying to get the perfect coffee machine is like trying to get a perfect man, impossible.

    So make do with one that is dependable and easy to clean up like a pod machine (nepresso is big in Italy).

    Plus both will got the job done in the time it takes to make a slice of toast.
    I was looking into a nespresso machine, but the pods are stupidly expensive. I would like a bean to cup machine and was looking at Jura and de Longhi, but I only drink coffee at home at the weekends, so will probably invest in a coffee grinder and stick to using a cafetiere.

    Leave a comment:


  • Scrag Meister
    replied
    Reminds me I still have a bag of beans that my dad bought back from a trip to Honduras, a while ago now.

    What is the sell by date on coffee beans, how long before they need chucking out?

    Leave a comment:


  • Gibbon
    replied
    Originally posted by MaryPoppins View Post
    I'm deep in the world of coffee machine reviews and completely baffled.

    I know that I don't want one of those pod insertion situations - I want bean to cup.

    But which ones are any good? Is it possible to get one for under £500?

    Heellpppp.
    Trying to get the perfect coffee machine is like trying to get a perfect man, impossible.

    So make do with one that is dependable and easy to clean up like a pod machine (nepresso is big in Italy).

    Plus both will got the job done in the time it takes to make a slice of toast.

    Leave a comment:

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