Breville Dual Boiler - for home baristas!

We all love going to the corner café for an expert barista coffee - but what about if you crave a really great cup at home?

Breville have set out to answer our plea for café-style coffee at home. They’ve launched the ultimate in home coffee makers - the Breville Dual Boiler - designed and engineered to equal its commercial cafe rivals. It has stainless steel boilers for steam and espresso allowing simultaneously milk texturing and extraction at the optimum temperature.

The machine’s steam boiler enables high volume, instant and continuous steam which halves the time to texture the milk - you get a silkier café-quality milk. It also features an over pressure value to deliver water at a constant maximum pressure of nine bars (the commercial standard) for perfect espresso extraction.

The Dual Boiler has an LCD screen with a `shot clock’ to tell you the temperature and extraction time of each espresso shot.  Dual Boiler RRP is $1,500. Breville have also just released their Smart Grinder (RRP 299.95), so that you can supply your Dual Boiler with fresh grounds for the perfect coffee.

Find more coffee machine on Lasoo.

Wednesday, 30 March 2011

Nespresso Pixie machine review

Nespresso Pixie machine review

Nespresso is a real success story - and they claim the ultimate coffee experience when their capsule meets a Nespresso machine. Pixie is the smallest, cutest machine to launch yet.

The Pixie is the ultimate in compact design. Made by one of Italy’s best coffee machine makers DeLonghi, the Pixie Nespresso comes in Electric Aluminium, Electric Lime (pictured) and Electric Steel. It’s the ultimate bright start to your day, makes both espresso and lungo coffee, and is remarkably simple and easy to use. 

Nespresso coffee is rated the best among ALL the capsule and non-capsule brewers; it is true that each cup is about 3x more expensive than using plain coffee grounds at home, but for an occassional cup it’s worth it. And the capsules are recyclable - in fact, Nespresso has recycling bins at their coffee boutiques, and they sell special containers for recycling your capsules at home.

Pixie operates only with Nespresso Coffee Capsules, available separately through Nestle’s Nespresso Club. See more Nespresso machines at Lasoo.

Thursday, 31 December 2009

Coffee machine buying guide

Coffee machine buying guide

If you can’t even contemplate starting your day without a cup of coffee, then you’re probably thinking of buying a coffee espresso machine for home or the office.

There are several different types available, depending on your needs and budget, as explained in our coffee machine buying guide below.

Manual coffee machines

Manual coffee machines are the cheapest available - you should be able to pick up a basic one for less than $200. However, as the name suggests, all functions are manual so you’ll be doing most of the work (including frothing the milk - there’s art to this). Cheaper manual coffee machines are likely to be made out of plastic, however if you spend a little more cash you will be able to get one with a better build quality, possible made from stainless steel.

Semi-automatic coffee machines

The next step up from a manual model is a semi-automatic coffee machine. These cost a few hundred dollars more (but usually under $1000) and have some automated features. These could include programmable control panels, an LCD screen for viewing the temperature or an in-built coffee grinder.

Automatic coffee machines

If you’re looking to buy at the top of the range, then you need an automatic coffee machine. As the name suggests, everything about this machine is automated so you should always be able to prepare the perfect cup of coffee to your liking. With the touch of one button, your milk will be frothed, your beans ground, your coffee brewed and poured.

Another bonus of automatic coffee machines is that they clean themselves - cleaning a coffee machine manually can be quite a tricky process, considering all the small parts and crannies.

Of course, for this kind of quality you are going to have to pay. The most expensive automatic coffee machines can cost anywhere up to $4000.

Capsule coffee machines

Capsule coffee machines are newish to the market and offer an alternative to their traditional manual and automatic counterparts. These are very small and compact machines that use pre-packaged capsules of coffee, which come in individual serves. You simply load the capsule, fill the water tank, press a button and out comes the coffee. Most come with a manual milk frother.

Unfortunately, these capsules usually need to be ordered online so if you run out and forgot to stock up, you may be without your coffee until replacements can be delivered.

Best coffee machines

Popular brands of coffee machines include DeLonghi and Saeco. Nespresso is the best-known brand of capsule coffee machine.

Buy a cheap coffee machine on sale

By Caroline Warnes