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Hall of Shame: ''What I did when I was a newbie...'' - Page 2

Want to talk espresso but not sure which forum? If so, this is the right one.

Link to "Hall of Shame: ''What I did when I was a newbie...''"by Kristi on Wed Dec 07, 2005 11:31 pm

okaychatt wrote:My claim to newbie shame is that when I started, I was confused about whether it was 1.5 to 2 oz in each shot glass or in total. DOH!


Using that new triple basket you don't have? :o))) I can sympathize!
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Link to "Hall of Shame: ''What I did when I was a newbie...''"by kav on Thu Dec 15, 2005 2:30 pm

I paid $700 for an Alessi Nespresso machine to try to recreate my Italian espresso experience. Oh, the shame! If only I'd found HB sooner, I could have had a real machine (and known the difference)!
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www.ptscoffee.com: without the love, it's just coffee
www.ptscoffee.com: without the love, it's just coffee

Link to "Hall of Shame: ''What I did when I was a newbie...''"by lennoncs on Fri Dec 16, 2005 8:30 pm

barry wrote:I didn't drink coffee.


Oh Man!

I grew to really like the coffee that was brewed in the tool boxes in auto plants.

Sean
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Link to "Hall of Shame: ''What I did when I was a newbie...''"by CGeek2005 on Sat Jan 07, 2006 4:51 pm

I started out a few years ago with a Mr. Coffee espresso machine. It probably cost all of $25 brand new. Pre-ground Starbucks beans. I don't recall doing any tamping at all. Like some of the above posts I thought I was quite the sophisticated rennaissance man! :oops:
Had to use all kinds of milk and flavored syrups; (you know... the big gulp approach) in order to make it palatable. Live and learn...

...Now I'm more lost than ever, but at least now I know that I don't know. :D
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Link to "Hall of Shame: ''What I did when I was a newbie...''"by Gatewood on Wed May 03, 2006 9:57 am

I had one of those aluminum stovetop thingies I got in college (this is in 1960, so cut me some slack!) and I thought I was really "into" espresso. I even drank that swill! And liked it! Thought I had gone into real pro stuff when I bought my Krups steam toy. But I always, ALWAYS, lusted after a lever machine. Why I waited until now to buy one, I'll never know. I've been through many other thermoblock and pump iterations. Only now can I have "real" espresso.
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Link to "Hall of Shame: ''What I did when I was a newbie...''"by ciordia9 on Wed May 03, 2006 10:16 am

Starbucks Barista v1 (old Saeco right?), Starbucks espresso, pre-ground, 8s extraction times. Then I got their burr grinder (still a great press-grinder) and found 12s extractions. I thought espresso was supposed to taste like dreck, therefore rarely made drinks.

Man I'm glad I'm no longer there.. I am a devout follower of correct practices.. Preach on!

-a
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Link to "Hall of Shame: ''What I did when I was a newbie...''"by mattwells on Sun May 07, 2006 6:32 am

I work in a coffee shop where the policy is "DON'T MESS WITH THE GRINDER!!" They won't let me adjust them, clean them, or fix the broken one (as a result all decaf is ground at the beginning of the week and placed in the hopper to sit all week and is not reground until we run out). Needless to say, it is the worst coffee and espresso I have ever tasted. But when you work for a big corporation, what can you do. Oh, and we get beans that were roasted about 3 months prior, and then the "Quality Control" says they cannot sit on the shelf for more than six months. Never buy coffee in Borders. It is awful, they don't care about their employees, and generally are a really bad company. The cafes are being changed over to Seattle's Best which, in this case, will be a drastic improvement.

Personally, I started with a Krups and preground Cafe Bustello.

Matt
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Krups Steamtoy and whirly blade!!!

Link to "Hall of Shame: ''What I did when I was a newbie...''"by JD on Fri May 12, 2006 8:39 am

I used a Krups Steamtoy and whirly blade grinder for many many years. Most of the time it just sat in the cupboard. I had an old braun drip machine and wanted another drip machine with clock and timer so I could grind my coffee the night before and have it waiting on me in the morning. I started researching the internet for the best products, and started reading about coffee and correct brewing temps and found CoffeeGeek. I bought a Braun KF 187 because it is supposed to brew at correct temps. Today it still sets on the counter as a clock mostly as I use a pourover cone for my drip coffee!!!
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Link to "Hall of Shame: ''What I did when I was a newbie...''"by onemoreshot on Fri May 12, 2006 12:24 pm

What I did when I was a newbie? Had the belief that I actually knew what I was doing, wow, was I wrong.

The more shots I pull, and diverse opinions I pay attention to, simply confirms the espresso universe is pretty large and keeps getting larger. Where's my telescope?
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Link to "Hall of Shame: ''What I did when I was a newbie...''"by Psyd on Sun May 14, 2006 6:36 pm

framey wrote:I used to be a fan of monster cups. I actually had my own special cup at a local cafe that probably held 600mls (20 ounces). They would keep it behind the bar especially for me. I thought this was a great setup :(
Please forgive me.


I got an imitation Krups as a gift, and later replaced it with a real live Krups, and thought that it was the real thing. I made quads in those giant latte bowls before I realized that those were for driving with a capp. Used to get JBM beans for birthdays and such, and would keep it in the fridger for a year, trying to 'make it last'.
I still have the giant latte bowls, but thy are relegated to tea 'doubles' and 'out-the-door' capps.
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Link to "Hall of Shame: ''What I did when I was a newbie...''"by VS_DoubleShot on Mon May 15, 2006 12:30 pm

capresso mini S, whirly blade grinder and stale starbux beans for over a year.
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Link to "Hall of Shame: ''What I did when I was a newbie...''"by Wushoes on Fri Jun 09, 2006 9:23 am

Backflushing on my Silvia, leaving the brew switch on for greater than 5 seconds with a blind filter last week. :oops:

I'm so used to backflushing on commercials, I didn't give it a 2nd thought till I was pointed out to Randy Glass' website on backflushing a Silvia without killing it by my local roaster!
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Link to "Hall of Shame: ''What I did when I was a newbie...''"by HB on Fri Jun 09, 2006 4:49 pm

Wushoes wrote:...I was pointed out to Randy Glass' website on backflushing a Silvia without killing it by my local roaster!

With all due respect to Randy's recommendations, it's never made any sense to me. Silvia owners accidentally choke the machine. They pull ristrettos. How is that operationally different than backflushing? The expansion valve is going to vent excess pressure by returning water to the reservoir in all these cases.
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Link to "Hall of Shame: ''What I did when I was a newbie...''"by miKe mcKoffee on Thu Jun 15, 2006 12:32 am

HB wrote:With all due respect to Randy's recommendations, it's never made any sense to me. Silvia owners accidentally choke the machine. They pull ristrettos. How is that operationally different than backflushing? The expansion valve is going to vent excess pressure by returning water to the reservoir in all these cases.
Ditto, see also
http://www.coffeegeek.com/forums/...sso/machines/22886
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Link to "Hall of Shame: ''What I did when I was a newbie...''"by annp on Wed Jun 21, 2006 9:58 am

Sigh...

Blew up several Krups machines, graduated to a Krups pump machine, kept my OLD beans in the freezer, thought I was a pro when I got my then new pre starbarks branded Saeco and used it for 10 years, discovered coffeegeek when I let the smoke out of yet another cheap grinder and the rest is history.

I still drink huge bad caps. I just make two triples in them now. Even with all the reasons that everyone has given me not to. Sorry.

But I don't think it's silly to own espresso equipment that costs as much as a really good used car. I'd rather buy my clothes at target and not buy any new music and keep my old TV.

Does anyone else miss their espresso machine when they go on vacation?

Ann
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Link to "Hall of Shame: ''What I did when I was a newbie...''"by HB on Wed Jun 21, 2006 10:57 am

annp wrote:Does anyone else miss their espresso machine when they go on vacation?

No, I bring it and even blog about the experience. Maybe next time I'll leave the laptop at home... :roll:
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Link to "Hall of Shame: ''What I did when I was a newbie...''"by Psyd on Wed Jun 21, 2006 4:58 pm

annp wrote:Does anyone else miss their espresso machine when they go on vacation?


Nope.

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Link to "Hall of Shame: ''What I did when I was a newbie...''"by Dogshot on Wed Jun 21, 2006 6:54 pm

annp wrote:Does anyone else miss their espresso machine when they go on vacation?


I had a stomach thing last weekend that prevented me from drinking espresso for 3 days. I missed it so much, even though I could still clean (ie caress) the machine or the grinder any time.

When I finally felt better I made myself a macchiato, and oh sweet dark mother...it was the best thing I ever tasted in my life.

Mark
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Link to "Hall of Shame: ''What I did when I was a newbie...''"by jesawdy on Wed Jun 21, 2006 9:35 pm

Dogshot wrote:I had a stomach thing last weekend that prevented me from drinking espresso for 3 days. I missed it so much, even though I could still clean (ie caress) the machine or the grinder any time.

When I finally felt better I made myself a macchiato, and oh sweet dark mother...it was the best thing I ever tasted in my life.

Mark


While we are a bit OT (but hey this is the Knockbox), a similar experience about a year ago helped me realize my addiction. I was crazy sick for the better part of a week and the FIRST thing I did when I finally felt better was make a pot of coffee. This has been a recurring thing upon any illness... only now it is an espresso.

Back on topic... I thought I was pretty smokin when I stopped using a blade grinder and used a Delonghi "burr" grinder from TJ Maxx with my Braun drip machine. It did actually make a better drip coffee though. I didn't realize that a french press did not have to have so much mouth feel (fines), until I made my first press pot with a Rocky.... big difference.

And then there is the Braun steam toy I've had for about 10 years.... I did actually use it a good bit.

And going way way back.... "Sanka" with my grandfather (hey I was like 10-12)... and later Bruegger's Bagles Hazelnut coffee in college. I thought that was the best stuff ever.

-Jeff
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Link to "Hall of Shame: ''What I did when I was a newbie...''"by beanmuncher on Sun Jun 25, 2006 10:56 am

I thought that good beans were coated in oil and were supposed to taste like charcoal.

I thought that preground Illy was an ideal object.

And, back before I got in to Espresso, I drank my drip with several ounces of sugar, milk, honey and whatever various spices I could lay my hands on. What can I say - I was young and foolish.
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