
Thanks.
j
Herb_Master wrote:I love my Bialetti, and use it a lot, sorry what was the question ?
Herb_Master wrote:I love my Bialetti, and use it a lot, sorry what was the question ?
Tamping down will compact the grounds, making it harder for water or steam to get through, but it will also go through more slowly. If compacted just hard enough then a best extraction will occur. too loose and not enough extraction of an already weak brew. too compact and it should be difficult for anything to get through.gingko wrote:I use a bialetti too, and I guess it's stainless steel.
One thing I never got clear is, once I heard that, if you use a little tool to tamp the coffee powder before brewing, the coffee will turn out good. Then I tried to tamp the coffee powder with a spoon, only to find I had to use larger fire (otherwise water won't go through) and then the coffee becomes tasteless. Did I tamp the coffee powder in wrong way?
Thanks Herb_Master! From the tastelessness, I guess that's what happened! Usually without tamping, after brewing, I still see all coffee powder forms a compact. Maybe I should try tamping much more gently. Maybe I should get a "real" espresso machine (when I get a larger kitchen)Herb_Master wrote: Not sure, but I suspect that if packed too tightly the steam / water finds it hard to get through, once it has found a small channel through then all that comes through will be through the one small channel rather than percolating through the whole mass of coffee grounds, that would account for it being tasteless. So tamp less hard!
It looks like it has a steamer arm for frothing milk ... how would you rate the performance of that feature?Herb_Master wrote: Now when not using a Bialetti on the stove, I use a Kenwood Retro
adequateSalsero wrote:It looks like it has a steamer arm for frothing milk ... how would you rate the performance of that feature?Herb_Master wrote: Now when not using a Bialetti on the stove, I use a Kenwood Retro