#Links Google Sheets List of Espresso Machines
Espresso Aficionados - Discord
Espresso Aficionados - Wiki (as of May 2023, this is the most up-to-date resource for machine recommendations and it has a bunch of detailed guides for how to dial in espresso, puck prep & troubleshooting, and more advanced techniques!)
#Espresso 101 Espresso starts with the coffee bean. Fresher is better. As u/Beans_McGhee says, âThe beans really need to be roasted within the month you use them for perfect espresso.â Store-bought beans are fine, reallyâbut part of the âfunâ of espresso is trying different beans.
You grind your coffee beans using a grinder. This sub has lots of opinions on grinders.
The amount of ground coffee you use is called the dose. So when u/SingularLattice says, âMake sure you have the right dose for your basketâ, thatâs what he means.
A basket is the little metal cup that goes in your portafilterâthatâs the metal thing with a handle on it. Espresso machines often come with 4 baskets: a single and a double in both unpressurized and pressurized. Doubles are the larger ones; pressurized variants are a different shape and may say âdual wallâ on the bottom.
You would use dual-wall if you are using pre-ground coffee. Almost everyone will make (âpullâ) double shotsâwhen you get into weights and times, itâs all based on a double. So you should likely use the unpressurized (single wall) double basket.
Advanced practitioners will dose by weight. Typically, youâd want ~7g for a single shot and ~18g for a double shot. Automatic grinders may dose by time: this will get you âclose enoughâ. Thus, the âsingleâ dose will be around 7g and the âdoubleâ will be around 18g. (You can fine-tune these amountsâmore on that later.)
Coffee grounds are light and fluffy, but you want them to be compact for espresso, so you tamp them (with your tamper). Advanced practitioners will calibrate their tamping pressure (e.g., with spring-loaded tampers)âdonât worry about that. Just give it a reasonable amount of force. If youâre putting your whole body weight on your tamper, thatâs too much.
You will get a feel for the right amount of force. You can also look at the level of the grounds in the basket. Use shape of your tamper or other tool to estimate how much space should be between your (tamped) grounds and the top of the basket.
As u/SingularLattice says, âYou need to tamp FLAT, not hard. So long as itâs firm, youâre good.â
At the advanced level, preparing espresso is all about ratios, namely weight and time. Generally, you want a 2:1 ratio in about 30 seconds. The 2:1 ratio means the ratio of your dose (i.e., ~18g) to the resulting espresso (i.e., ~36g). The process of brewing espresso is called extraction.
Many espresso machines will do this for you! When you press the double shot button, it will dispense enough water to make the ârightâ amount of espresso⊠presuming youâre using the right basket and the right dose! With such machines (e.g., the Breville Barista Express, or BBE), what you should do is watch the pressure gauge. It should be in the âespresso rangeâ. (Advanced practitioners will measure pressure in barsâyou want ~9 bars in an ideal world.)
If the pressure is low, you either need more grounds (higher dose)âwhich you can get by adjusting the grind amountâor a finer grindâwhich you can get by adjusting grind size. You may also need to tamp harder, but typically this isnât the problem.
(If your pressure is too high, the inverse is true⊠but this doesnât happen very often.)
Every bean is different, and so needs different settings to produce a good resultâin your case, to keep that pressure dial where you want it. The process of adjusting these different settings is called dialing in.
Your goal here is a well-extracted shot. Thatâs all about how it tastes! Espresso should be sweet and balanced. If itâs sour, itâs under-extracted (to which you would grind more and/or finer); if itâs bitter or astringent, itâs over-extracted (to which you would do the opposite).
Everyone here is adjusting all these variables (bean, pressure, grind size, dose, ratio, extraction time, and more) in search of the perfect shot!
(Derived from this post by u/basseq.)
****What espresso machine should I buy? Great question, and a very common one. Generally, there are two key inputs:
****How much do you want to âtinkerâ with your espresso? Do you want to play with different variables, or just wake up to a good coffee?
****How much do you want to spend?
Espresso can be a very expensive hobby, so the answer to the second question can you get to the best bang for your buck.
Remember that espresso is not just the machine. The other notable expense is the grinder, which can be as much asâif not more expensiveâthan the machine itself. Thereâs also some key accessories (notably a scale) and the cost of good coffee itself ($15+/lb).
#Recommendations by Budget ##<$500 â Bare Bones
If youâre looking to step up from a Nespresso or just drink less Starbucks, start here. There are really two ways to go:
Manual ($250â$300) â Flair Neo ($125) + 1Zpresso JX ($130).
Automatic ($450â$500) â Breville Bambino ($350) + Baratza Encore ($170).
The DeLonghi Dedica ($350) is also a solid choice. For grinders, you can also check out the Breville Dose Control ($150), or upgrade to the 1Zpresso J-Max ($230). The Sette 30 ($300) and Mignon Notte ($320) grinders are solid, but may put you above $500.
If youâre really looking to do espresso on the cheap, forego the grinder and work with pressurized portafilters on the Neo or Bambino. Many of us started with things like the DeLonghi EC155 ($100), but itâs hard to recommend.
Keep in mind that the espresso you get in a cafe was ground on a grinder that cost around $2000 and brewed on a machine that cost at least $15,000. You canât shrink all of that into a sub $300 setup without a huge loss of quality. âu/MyCatsNameIsBernie
##$500â900 â Entry Level
If you think youâre âseriousâ about espresso, this may be a better entry point than above, which you might outgrow sooner than later. There are two common choices here:
All-In-One â Breville Barista Express ($750) or Pro ($850). While the community sees the built-in grinder as the weak spot (no upgrade path), and long-term reliability can be spotty, it an easy and popular entry point into the prosumer market.
Separate Setup ($800â900) â Gaggia Classic Pro ($500) + Baratza Sette 270 ($400) â The Gaggia is a classic and time-tested, with lots of options in the used market.
Something like a Bambino Plus ($500) or Lelit Anna ($570) might also work. There are a lot of good grinders in this range: the DF64 ($400), Eureka Mignon Silenzio ($470), Baratza Vario ($480), and Rancilio Rocky ($430) are all well-regarded.
If youâre strapped for cash, the r/espresso guidance is to prioritize the grinder. Better to run a cheaper machine (Bambino/Dedica) with a nicer grinder than the other way around.
##$900â$1,500 â The Standard
The endgame for many people, this range is probably the âsweet spotâ for great espresso without going over the deep-end.
The r/espresso Standard â Rancilio Silvia ($850) + Niche Zero ($680) â The Silvia is a classic, moddable, and can be found used. For this price range, the alternate choice might be something like a Lelit Glenda ($900), or pairing a Gaggia with a nicer grinder. For grinders, ECM and Profitec both have offerings ($550), Baratza Vario W+ ($600), Eureka Mignon Specialita ($700), or any of the ones in the previous category. You can start mixing and matching machines and features and specs.
##$1,500â3,000 â Prosumer
Weâre getting heavily into the âprosumerâ market now, and there are less common machine+grinder pairings, so weâll start looking at them separately.
Machines â Profitec Pro ($1,800), ECM Classika ($1,600), Lelit Elizabeth ($1,700), Rocket Appartamento ($1,700). The land of shiny chrome and lots of knobs. The Breville Dual Boiler ($1,600) is in this range too.
Grinders â Mazzer Mini ($800), Mahlkonig X54 ($750), Eureka Oro ($800).
##$3,000+ â Dream Machines
From here, itâs dream machine land and the art of the possible. If youâre asking, âWhat should I buy,â you probably shouldnât start here.
Machines â Lelit Bianca ($2,900), ECM Synchronika ($3,200), Decent DE1 ($3,500), plus some offerings from Isomac, Rocket, Elektra, or Nuova Simonelli. You get into true âendgameâ machines like La Marzocco Linea Mini ($5,900) or Slayer Single Group ($10,000).
Grinders â Eureka Atom 75 ($1,400), Mahlkonig E65S ($2,300), KafaTek Monolith Flat ($2,500), Weber EG-1 ($3,700).##
Thank you for posting this. Iâve pinned it.
Also, this is in the sidebar, but I think itâll be helpful here, too. The main resource from the Reddit sub.
Linked below is the link to the espresso aficionados website which is much more comprehensive.
You should consider adding a link to this post in the about section of the sub
Doing now. I also pinned it for easy finding.
Good tips. Thanks
As an owner of both the Gaggia Classic and the Rancilio Silvia, the Silvia should really be downgraded as a recommendation on a higher tier than the Classic in my opinion. It used to be worth it but apart from a larger boiler, the machine is not really worth the price premium compared to the classic.
Just a random comment.
I would agree with you if I want to buy a new machine. But I managed to get a used Silvia at a lower price than a used Gaggia. Maybe I just got lucky.
Just beacause BDB retails over $1,500, it should in no way be considered a prosumer level machine. I do not think Breville makes that claim anywaysâŠ
There was (and is) a gap between the top of âStandardâ and bottom of âProsumerâ. Iâve got a decentish grinder (Breville, I know but it does rate well and give a consistent grind) and need to replace a broken espresso machine, with a 1k-1.3k budget, and nothing here fits that range :-/. Is it that there really arenât options in that range, or are they just not worth it? Is it better to buy a Gaggia Pro and pocket the difference, or a used low-end Prosumer? Or something just not mentioned here?