Speaking of wannabe espresso machines…

 
 
 
 
  • Posted by RossG
  • Wed, 10/19/2011 - 16:16

And we are speaking of them when we’re discussing Nespresso, Tassimo, and the best of the lot, the Lavazza. However, there are other items that look like espresso machines, are called espresso machines, sometimes even function like espresso machines, and yet under their inevitably cheap feeling plastic exterior they are nothing like a reason espresso machine. They are called “steam driven” or “steam powered” espresso machines, but people in the know usually just refer to them as “steam toys.”

Steam Toys have no moving parts, you lock in a portfalter that looks like the real deal, fill the tank with water and turn it on. The water boils, steam travels through the machine to the portafilter, condenses and pretend-espresso drips out. There is no pressure, no pump, its closer to (but less effective than) a stovetop espresso maker than it is to a real espresso machine. Also, you don’t use enough espresso, for the large output of coffee so the coffee you do get is over-extracted and yet still watery.

These machines almost ruined espresso for me. My parents owned a Krups steam toy which they thought was just a basic coffee machine. They loved it, because it would produce small batches of coffee and they didn’t have to worry about having to get filters! I knew that this thing was supposed to produce coffee, but the coffee was so terrible it almost turned me off of it completely.

Upside: these things are seriously cheap. I’m talking 20-30 bucks if you look around. But why would you ever want to do that? I mean, if all you want is a caffeinated beverage get yourself a French press for ten or fifteen dollars, don’t like to yourself and say you’re making espresso! I get it, its really tough to decide to spend more on an espresso machine than what you might spend on a refrigerator or stove, but that is an apt comparison. When you’re talking about buying an espresso machine you really are talking about buying an appliance. Something closer to a stove than to a, I don’t know, waffle iron. If anything, espresso machines can be much more complicated than many large kitchen appliances!

In any case, if you’re considering an espresso machine and are leaning towards a steam one, I beseech you to just do a little research first.

REVIEWS & COMMENTS

  • CAN'T BLAME THEM

    samuellaw178 | Mon, 11/14/2011 - 19:16

    I don't think they're to blame because those steam toy machine most often than not label themselves as espresso machine. Any average consumer will not know what's the difference. And these machines are everywhere so it's hard not to think that they're actually not the real deal.

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  • STEAM

    yeahyeah | Mon, 11/14/2011 - 17:23

    My parents had one of these, good steam power, terrible coffee.

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  • IT IS RATHER CRIMINAL THAT

    intrepid510 | Thu, 10/20/2011 - 00:26

    It is rather criminal that Krups can say their machines produce espresso. Really I think people need to be using good coffee first and if they are this site they probably know this and that these machines stink!

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  • NO THANKS

    jbviau | Wed, 10/19/2011 - 22:45

    I leapt right over this class of machine and went straight for a Gaggia Carezza (then soon afterward moved to a Classic). No regrets.

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  • OVERPRICED

    Wakeknot | Wed, 10/19/2011 - 19:37

    even at $20 they are overpriced. If you know it will produce something undrinkable I think even free is overpriced since it will take work to get rid of it!

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  • HARD TO USE

    EricBNC | Wed, 10/19/2011 - 18:08


    These are hard to make work correctly - most people give up before getting close - there are easier and better ways but those take a bigger budget.

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