Dogshot wrote:I must admit that I have really come to enjoy roasting in the short amount of time that I have been doing so. To me, it is the most creative part of the process, since you are transforming otherwise unusable green beans into something different, unique and delicious.
One more thing about the difference between the two styles. Many people use bottled water for their machine. For the typical home user, who probably makes a couple of coffees 3-5 times per day, an HX machine will require up to 40 ounces of total flushing. That's a lot of pricey water to be emptying out of the drip-tray.
luca wrote:I can appreciate that these reviews are a lot trickier to write than they seem.
From my quick skim of the review, it's clear that the temp control aspect makes life easier, but, as everybody now says, 'the limitation is on the handle side of the portafilter'. (Side note: if 'it's the grinder, stupid' is the mantra of CG, that's gotta be the mantra of HB)
a) How difficult would it be to add a brew pressure gauge? Is there enough room?
b) I seem to remember that you did, or were about to do, a rotary conversion. How's that going? How did it affect preinfusion?
c) Seeing as you've got/had both the Giotto P and the Brewtus sitting in front of you, could you tell us if it would be possible to swap the insulated steam arm onto the Brewtus? (Yeah, I appreciate that it's an expensive upgrade ;P)
Abe Carmeli wrote:From my quick skim of the review, it's clear that the temp control aspect makes life easier, but, as everybody now says, 'the limitation is on the handle side of the portafilter'. (Side note: if 'it's the grinder, stupid' is the mantra of CG, that's gotta be the mantra of HB)
I agree completely. It is only after you perfected your Barista technique, that you should think about upgrading any of your equipment.
chelya wrote:Learning on a better equipment is more enjoyable and allows you to better control the parameters.
chelya wrote:I am not sure I agree, Abe.
Better equipment leads to better and easier "morning after" cup. I upgraded while learning and do not regret it. Learning on a better equipment is more enjoyable and allows you to better control the parameters.
chelya wrote:In general I agree. But wouldn't you recommend to upgrade from any HX to Double boiler to make learning process easier? And yes - at the end it is the handle side of the portafilter that matters, but learning is a lot easier in consistent reproducible environment.
When a beginner tries to control everything at once - dosing, tamp, temps, etc - it is a hard task. I was going crazy at first trying to control everything and not knowing how to do it. What I did was I got the equipment to control some of the variables - Brewtus (temps), Macap tamper (tamp) - once a few variables were out of the equation - life became much easier.
JamesL wrote:Hi Abe,
The picture of your shot looks impressive, I have read about the blends and the temperature you used and I am interested in your brew pressure setting. Would you please reveal the brew pressure setting on the machine? Had you changed the original setting?
Thanks a lot.
JayHere wrote:Great review Abe - thanks!
Don't agree that it should have a Fahrenheit temp option because besides the US, the only other superpowers that are non-metric are Liberia and Myanmar (Burma).
Dogshot wrote:Abe - what pressure setting for the steam boiler is your set of flush regimes in the review based on? I notice that many people like to run their steam boiler at fairly high pressure to maximize the steaming capability of the machine. With an HX running from steam to brew boiler, I would imagine that running a higher pressure in the steam boiler would increase Brewtus' tendency to overshoot after a while, and would consequently require a slightly different regime?