|
|
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
home | recipe box | cooking recipe e-book | recipe management software | gourmet web template | |||||||||||||||||||||
Others say...
"Very Happy !" I love my coffee grinder. It grinds the beans very fine, so you can enjoy the taste of the coffee. It is the most "quiet" coffee grinder that I have ever owned. Thank you! "Better not want to grind espresso beans! Buyer Beware!" I bought the Solis Maestro (not the plus - much difference?) and promptly filled the bean hopper about 1/4 full with Starbuck's espresso coffee beans only to have it hang up 3 times before it finally finished them off with annoying cleaning and bean rearangement in the maintime. By hang up, I mean the grinder was grinding but no beans were moving or being ground. I had to unplug the machine and manually move the beans with my finger to get the machine running again. Apparently a design flaw allows the oily beans to stick together enough not to feed well. The machine did sound good (not noisy) and did a good job of grinding when it worked. If you don't want espresso (which this machine is supposed to be designed for) it may be a good machine for you. I can't imagine that Solis didn't correct their design flaw with their new Maestro plus but I wouldn't count on it. Better check the new Solis Maestro PLUS machine's feedback if you have your heart set on this machine! "Maestro coffee grinder" I don't do Espresso so can't comment on the finer settings, but the coarse grind (I use a Bodum press pot) works great. This unit is much better than the Capresso unit it is replacing. There is much less static electricity than the Capresso unit. If I grind when I start the water boiling, none of the ground coffee sticks to the side of the collection unit. By the time the water is boiled, a gentle tap of the collection unit spills all of the ground coffee into the press pot. Highly recommended, it would probably rate 5 stars but I only give 5 stars to perfect units and nothing is perfect. Buy it, you won't be sorry.
|
Baratza Maestro Conical Burr Coffee Grinder 8-oz.
Why I buy this one ? - Model No.: G285 - Type of Grinder: Burr - Settings: 40 - Capacity: 8-oz. Bean Hopper 5-oz. Grounds Bin - Dimensions: 13x5x6-in. Special offer for you..find the cheapest!
Ace Photo Digital offers this stuff with condition New, new for:
Essential Espresso Inc offers this stuff with condition New, new for:
UnbeatableSale, Inc offers this stuff with condition New, new for:
Cooking.com offers this stuff with condition New, new for:
What our customer's say! "Absolutely not for espresso; good for drip and french press", I've owned this grinder for a year. I needed a cheap burr grinder with a good reputation, capable of properly grinding beans for espresso (a difficult task). At $99, the Maestro was the best choice to accompany my Starbucks Barista (manufactured by Saeco), bought locally through craigslist. I'm not crazy about the pressurized portafilter (nor are most espresso drinkers) but this is best I can do until I get out of grad school and can afford the Silvia. Procedure: I buy freshly roasted beans, grind them with the finest grind, preheat the portafilter, and tamp with an aftermarket aluminum tamper. The result: weak espresso that runs fast and lacks flavor and crema. In one year I have never pulled a good shot--just mediocre shots that are better in mixed than straight--and I can still taste the poor quality when mixed. To investigate, I broke one major rule and ground the beans ahead of time with Whole Food's commercial grinder in the store (ideally, you grind seconds before brewing--I brewed the next day). Next day, same routine. Results: delicious, near perfect shots, worth sipping and savoring. Dark red crema, slow pulls, complex flavor. I never pulled a shot like this before. Conclusion: I'll be grinding my beans in the store from now on. It wasn't the machine, it was the grinder. So don't buy the Maestro if you want good espresso, it WILL NOT do the job. ("minor" side note: for those interested in good drip and french press coffee, the Maestro is a great choice). To quote coffeegeek.com: "I can make a better shot of espresso with a $200 espresso machine and a $400 grinder than I can with a $2,000 espresso machine and no grinder (or a blade grinder)... and it's absolutely true." "Excellent product and customer service", Product performs better than I expected. The range of the size of the grind is consistant and has the ability to be widely varied from espresso grind to very course. The motor operation is quite, as grinding can go,and not obnoxious sounding. I love the product! "I love mine!!!", I can't believe all the problems with clogging people are having!!! Mine worked excellent for over two years. It started to grind a little slowly (the burrs weren't "catching" the beans), so I recently replaced the inner and outer burrs and it's back to 100% again and going strong. I often grind beans that are roasted past full city and are slightly oily. I'd probably get the plus model with finer adjustment steps for grinding espresso, but other than that I'm very happy with it. One thing I noticed on mine is that there's a white plastic piece with fins on it that spins with the inner burr to push the coffee out. One of my fins is broken off. I'm thinking that may be the secret to why mine doesn't clog. This would cause a larger amount of ground coffee to be pushed out at one time once per revolution of the burr. It also might help lessen some excessive air current that keeps the coffee spinning instead of being pushed out of the machine or causes back pressure due to the small opening where the coffee comes out. Maybe the others just got stuck with a set of burrs that weren't machined quite right? I don't know... Mine works great though and I was very surprised to see all of these negative reviews. Parts and service are available from the manufacturer... [..] EDIT: I see now the newer models have a different motor than mine and the best model has a speed reduction control knob. The newer motors probably turn a little faster and cause the mill not to feed as well. Funny how an attempt to improve a product doesn't always work out... "Hard to clean - Other problems", I've had this grinder about two years. So I've had a long experience with it. I use mostly Starbucks French Roast and Italian Roast and I grind it fairly fine even though I use a regular Mr. Coffee coffee maker. I like strong, flavorful coffee. And it will grind that. But the trouble is, it gets clogged up quickly --- often after one use. And cleaning it is a bear! I have to take a screw driver and get the coffee out of the top and a paper clip to go through the lower part. I will say that it's easy to get through to support and they're very nice and helpful. But they can't do the cleaning and fixing for you. And I don't have a local place that fixes these. It's very quiet. And one thing I love about it is that the container that accepts the coffee doesn't have much if any static. So it's clean as far as putting the coffee into the maker is concerned. If you prefer more course coffee, this might work great for you. But if you like fine coffee and, especially, espresso, forget it. I've read in several places that you can run some white rice through a grinder and clean it. I've not tried it yet but will. Perhaps that will make the job easier. For most hard-core coffee drinkers, I don't recommend this unit basically because of the fact it is so hard to clean. And it clogs quickly and often. "Not worth the money", When I decided to buy a coffee grinder and espresso machine, I researched and read reviews and thought "This is the one!" Unfortunately, it never lived up to its name. After the first few weeks, it wouldn't grind unless you constantly jiggled it to get the beans to seat in the grinder. Yes, I took it apart and cleaned and dried it as per manufacturer's instructions, but it would NEVER grind the beans very fine. I like espresso type grind but had to settle for the coarsest grind it did. As the months wore on, it just got worse. I finally got to the point where I had to use a wooden spoon handle to force the beans into the grinder. I know this sounds ridiculous, but I had spent $140 on this thing and I didn't want to just throw it away. Maybe if you used an extremely "dry" or slightly undercooked roast, it would work better? This used to be made by Solis. I would NEVER recommend their coffee grinders. I do have a Solis espresso machine that I purchased at the same time as the coffee grinder and it works well. ![]()
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
Software Download Directory / Files Download / Digital Camera Review
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Date: Tue, 02 Dec 2008 19:41:44 GMT
Server: Apache/1.3.37 (Unix) mod_ssl/2.8.28 OpenSSL/0.9.7a mod_deflate/1.0.21 FrontPage/5.0.2.2623 Sun-ONE-ASP/4.0.0
Vary: Host
Last-Modified: Fri, 03 Oct 2008 21:13:00 GMT
ETag: "33151c-56e-48e68adc"
Accept-Ranges: bytes
Content-Length: 1390
Connection: close
Content-Type: text/plain
Free Online Recipe,
Lowongan Kerja,
Indonesia Map,
Kamus,
Video Lyrics,
Health Vitamin,
PAD Generator,
Free Web Template, Wordpress Theme,
Deal Bargain Offers,
Affiliate Datafeed,
Mac OSX Tricks
Online Game Cheat,
Online Flash Game,
Electric Guitar Review,
RC Helicopter Reviews
Ascii Art, Anagram Finder, Clapper Generator, Post-it Note, Dog Name Generator, Freelance Jobs, Network Tools © Copyright 2000 - 2008 . All Rights Reserved. Online Recipe Collection
|
||||||||||||||||||||||