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Originally Posted by Swissaire
(Post 22417091)
I saw yesterday that a new machine and pod is out from Nespresso.
http://www.nespresso.com/za/en/ There is a new Vertuo line, with smaller half-moon wrapped pods similar to the commercial variety sold before. The Vertuo machine makes either standard coffee, or espresso, offering your guests a choice apparently. It looks like a Rimowa with the side rillen, which is what caught my eye. ( I packed my Pixie machine for this trip and discovered the new machine whilst I was out looking for pods ). |
For anyone who doesn't already own a Nespresso machine and is looking to pick one up: there's currently a promo running for $75 in free capsule credit when you buy any machine for $199 and up direct from Nestle in the US.
http://bit.ly/1kimhjw As far as the Vertuo goes, I'm not a huge fan. I saw one last week at Sur la Table, and while it was a slick contraption, I like the variety of capsules available for the old system as well as the flexibility to use third-party capsules. |
I wish I understood why they insist on a (short) shelf-life date for the capsules when they are in fully sealed pods. I know it is for the cash but I haven't found any difference in taste way past the date and I'd love to hear from someone trying some really old ones.
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Coffee beans,grinder,cafetiere,hot water,fresh coffee.
Why complicate such a simple and pleasurable process unless you only have the brains of a rocking horse? |
Originally Posted by Showbizguru
(Post 22788035)
Coffee beans,grinder,cafetiere,hot water,fresh coffee.
Why complicate such a simple and pleasurable process unless you only have the brains of a rocking horse? http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/17337194-post149.html |
Originally Posted by Showbizguru
(Post 22788035)
Coffee beans,grinder,cafetiere,hot water,fresh coffee.
Why complicate such a simple and pleasurable process unless you only have the brains of a rocking horse? |
Hi UK1 -
The Gaggia line of coffee machines are excellent. For many years, this was my first choice for coffee making, and I even ground and mixed my own beans using Santa Clara coffee beans from Brasil with good Mokka beans. The problem was the prep time (using a Gaggia burr grinder), clean-up, storage, and the increasing time cleaning and working on my Gaggia Carezza machines. I noticed that my coffee was not coming out consistently, sometimes being too acid, sometimes, not. Nespresso being a long-time local product was available anywhere. I sampled a demo demitasse one day, then again that week, followed by another, and it started making sense. Consistency. My Carezza started having gasket problems ( perhaps felling scorned at my Nespresso sampling ) and I decided to make the jump. My treasured coffee equipment was repaired, cleaned, packaged, and went to a rental property we have for guests. When it finally died, and they do, it was replaced with a Nespresso Citiz. I get more good comments on those machines from guests than anything else. Other than the occasional descaling every 6 months, and the restocking of coffee capsules, they are virtually maintenance free. |
Apologies for not being clear, entirely my fault. I gave up the Synchrony ... in fact I had three..... and have a couple of Nespressos. Thrilled to bits with them.
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Originally Posted by Kgmm77
(Post 22788193)
.....because some of us have to work for a living and accept the time/quality trade-off that allows a reasonably espresso (in my case whilst I'm ironing a shirt in a rush in the morning).
It's why I no longer need to work for a living. :D |
Originally Posted by uk1
(Post 22788609)
Apologies for not being clear, entirely my fault. I gave up the Synchrony ... in fact I had three..... and have a couple of Nespressos. Thrilled to bits with them.
www.algcoffee.co.uk |
Originally Posted by Showbizguru
(Post 22790525)
Order the Mocha Parfait beans online from the Algerian Coffee Store in Old Compton Street and you'll never drink another coffee.
www.algcoffee.co.uk As it happens the Nespresso produces almost as good or better than anything I've ever produced even when I was blending and roasting and thought I was making perfect coffee. It took me years to try a Nepresso simply beliving a small machine like that with a pod could never do it. Once you choose the right pod for you any other approach seems pointless. Every pod is fresh and you get the same thing every cup. It's cheaper and more convenient. If you don't have coffee for a few days nothing goes stale. And there's no cleaning to speak of. |
Originally Posted by uk1
(Post 22790708)
I use to order from Algerian green beans and roast and blend myelf ... use to go there regularly .. and now I'm out of London they have an excellent mail order service. Coincidentally, I had a club in D'arblay street a long time ago. :D
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Originally Posted by Showbizguru
(Post 22790778)
I had a sneaky feeling all along that you were Peter Stringfellow. ;)
The club days were wonderful days though. Soho in the 60/70's :D |
Originally Posted by Showbizguru
(Post 22788035)
Coffee beans,grinder,cafetiere,hot water,fresh coffee.
Why complicate such a simple and pleasurable process unless you only have the brains of a rocking horse? With the Nespresso, by the time my mind actually wakes up I'm already enjoying my coffee. Bliss. And yes, the consistency is key to the appeal, at least for me. I don't drink very much coffee but I want what I do drink to be good. It's not medicine to be glugged down with eyes clenched shut and a grimace. I want to enjoy every sip. |
VertuoLine
Anyone tried the Vertuoline? I am looking to get a single cup type brewer and the new Nespresso intrigues me. Also, how would it compare to a Keurig? I think Keurig has many more refills. But beyond that, I'm clueless.
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