Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Wish I'd Thought of This & A Coffee Cri de Coeur

Via Seattle Coffee Gear (where I have spent a great deal of time of late, lusting over their machines and watching their fabulous "how to" You Tube Videos), I found Internet Cafe Hobo. Of course it's the BBC. Now, this is a fun way to see the world... Too tired tonight to say much more, except to say that my current espresso machine is broken, really, really broken.

And, people, how stiff do you like (or make) your cappuccino foam ? Are you a "micro" foamer, or do you prefer a stiffer foam ? One snooty professional style video insisted that "one never spoons the foam out of the pitcher." Uh-Oh. I intend to refine my technique, I think. As soon as I have a machine that actually has pressure in the steam wand again. Sigh. To the left is the image of one I lust for, though I'm not actually certain I'd buy something this expensive even if I could afford it. I'd like to play with it, though, let me tell you...

From what I've read and seen on the videos, there is clearly an anthropology dissertation (or two or three) to be written on espresso culture and rituals. I suppose I could get into a rant on consumerism and how we've been sold the idea about being "serious" equalling spending serious money on equipment and accessories ---and this seems true of almost any endeavor these days---, but I do love the techie beauty of these machines and the real knowledge that seems to go into a good number of morning coffee rituals out there in the world. I, on the other hand, am not exactly an amateur, but I have a plastic tamper, folks. Maybe it's the challenge...


*As usual, dear reader(s), I am following my passions here, and have no financial connections to SCG or the machine pictured.

2 comments:

John B. said...

Being a high-church kind of guy, I am strongly attracted to ritual and ceremony as well. Coffee-making, especially given its first-thing-in-the-morning prominence, is a kind of communion: Me, some beans in the grinder, an unbleached paper filter, and some filtered water. It's calming and centering, the grinding, the pouring. This cup is the new caffeine in my blood. I understand the convenience of having a maker with a timer set up so as to make the coffee for me, but I don't know. That feels like cheap grace. I try to do what I can to earn it by making it myself.

Like you, I certainly feel the pull of technologies that enhance experiences that I enjoy, and/but like you I have to ask myself, At what point, when we want to buy into or upgrade our technologies, does the law of diminishing returns kick in? I drink my coffee black most mornings, so my needs are pretty simple: a drip brewer, a grinder, and--my one splurge (but, you know, "splurge" is a relative term)--good beans. So, this cappuccino machine seems excessive--but then again, I don't drink cappuccinos on anything like a regular basis, so the idea of owning even the cheapest machine with a way of steaming the milk strikes me as unnecessary.

Forgive all this rambling that really just repeats what you're saying. I just really like making my coffee, and I think the thing I like most about it is precisely that it's so simple and yet so utterly satisfying.

Willo said...

Ah, Cordelia, you have been gone so long. Nice to see you are back.