Tags:
No Jay I haven't opened my own shop. I have helped others open shops and therefor have pretty good authority to give advice about it. Obviously I am not suggesting that Paul build another shop in a year. What I am suggesting is purchasing a superauto (these days prices on them have dropped significantly to compete with traditional) and relying on the consistency to build his staff and operations. After one year the machine should still have a resale value of 50-75% assuming it was cleaned regularly and taken care of. The market for used equipment is great and reselling the superauto really shouldn't be a problem (and yes I am speaking from experience on that as well). So in the end, Paul may have to spend a grand or so extra than if he started off with a semi auto.
I know the image of "chucking" a year old superauto probably gets you all hot and bothered Jay but to a lot of people it's a valuable piece of equipment.
Paul, is anything that I've said having an impact on your views? You can whisper so the popular kids don't think you're uncool.
Jay Caragay said:Rescue-
Have you ever actually owned or operated a coffee joint before? Because your response seems to encourage Paul to go out, build a shop (with presumably a Super Auto), "build" the community (with super auto coffee) and then either buy a new machine or build a new shop after a year - and the "community" will follow - is this correct?
Any operator knows how expensive it is to build a coffee joint. Let's spend twelve thousand dollars (probably more) on a super auto, only to chuck it in twelve months for a semi-auto??? Or let's spend one hundred thousand dollars building a shop, only to toss it off and build a new one in twelve months???
This just seems like a completely ludicrous way to go about things.
Yeah Jesse! Thanks for humoring me, not writing me off or threatening me with textual ass-kickings (am I not part of the "WE" here Paul? Wait, my account is still active right? Oh phew). I will find out about possibilities for you to play around with a Melitta that are in the Rocky Mountain area of the country and report back. Thanks for being open to change and not perpetuating the rest of the world's view of baristas as the exclusive, untouchable popular kids in school.
Jesse Bladyka said:I would like to know where I can get "good coffee" out of one of these superautos. This sounds like a really interesting machine and I'd love to spend a day with one. I have very little experience with super-autos, simply because I love and believe in the human element of service and hand made goods, whether it is bakery, dinner, or coffee, I want slow food. Anyway, are there any of these machines in service in the Rocky Mountain region? Any independents that might allow a bloke to come play with their fancy machine? I'm going against all of my preconceptions here and trying hard not to knock it until I try it.
Espresso Rescue said:I'd like to know what experiences you are drawing from in your evaluation of super autos? We repair many from the bitty Starbucks Barista machines up to the Melitta machines and everything in between. And you are right, most produce a tainted brew. Why would this be? Think about the food path. If it's touching plastic it is most likely being tainted by past drinks and coating/staining the plastic to create future tainting. The starbucks machines (and I mean the home machines that they sell, not what they use in their stores) are completely plastic. The Egro, the Jura, the Schaerer, and Saeco are for the most part plastic. The Verissimo 701 and 801, the higher end Franke machines and the Melitta machines are for the most part stainless steel. Pretty much down to the spout. Do some real taste testing on some real super autos and I think you will find quality.
I know I am standing up for he-who-shall-not-be-named, Mr Super Auto, on the largest online community for professional baristas but the only way the rest of society will get onboard with espresso is if it fits their life. Everyone on here wants as many people as possible to share the magic of Specialty Coffee at its finest but, oh yeah, you have to live in a place that can support it economically (like not most of Middle America), you have to have time to wait for someone to make something that could take a third of the time, and you have to give pretty advanced training to your staff if you plan to serve it or provide it in your business.
I'm not saying "down with traditional", I'm saying there is a time and a place and no one should be excluded.
What does the barista do to create that "magic", "soul", "love" that makes the espresso superior? The super auto I'm talking about (the Melitta C5FF) begins with a Mahlkonig Grinder. The burrs set themselves based on humidity and temp readings. It's dosed into a chamber much the same size as a Spaziale. A stainless steel piston applies thirty pounds of pressure much like an Espro Clicker Tamp. The extraction is through a micro screen with probably 100 times the holes as a traditional grouphead screen (45,150 holes to be exact), a much finer extraction. The water comes from a brew boiler that is PID controlled. The steam is coming from a steam boiler that is PID controlled.
So where was the magic supposed to be added?
Another suggestion for you is to make sure you are having GOOD coffee out of the superautomatic, this is one of the remaining factors that the Super Auto cannot control.
No Jay I haven't opened my own shop. I have helped others open shops and therefor have pretty good authority to give advice about it. Obviously I am not suggesting that Paul build another shop in a year. What I am suggesting is purchasing a superauto (these days prices on them have dropped significantly to compete with traditional) and relying on the consistency to build his staff and operations. After one year the machine should still have a resale value of 50-75% assuming it was cleaned regularly and taken care of. The market for used equipment is great and reselling the superauto really shouldn't be a problem (and yes I am speaking from experience on that as well). So in the end, Paul may have to spend a grand or so extra than if he started off with a semi auto.
I know the image of "chucking" a year old superauto probably gets you all hot and bothered Jay but to a lot of people it's a valuable piece of equipment.
Paul, is anything that I've said having an impact on your views? You can whisper so the popular kids don't think you're uncool.
Jay Caragay said:Rescue-
Have you ever actually owned or operated a coffee joint before? Because your response seems to encourage Paul to go out, build a shop (with presumably a Super Auto), "build" the community (with super auto coffee) and then either buy a new machine or build a new shop after a year - and the "community" will follow - is this correct?
Any operator knows how expensive it is to build a coffee joint. Let's spend twelve thousand dollars (probably more) on a super auto, only to chuck it in twelve months for a semi-auto??? Or let's spend one hundred thousand dollars building a shop, only to toss it off and build a new one in twelve months???
This just seems like a completely ludicrous way to go about things.
@ bry- My volume is uncertain at this point, as a coffee shop has never been started in this town. However, due to my planned location, in the downtown business area and close to the county courthouse, I think I can anticipate a steady flow of perhaps 10 people an hour coming in, with bursts up to 20 to 25. I plan to offer non-espresso based drinks to appeal to the non-coffee drinkers, as well as light snacks, desserts, pastries, with wifi and comfortable seating in the mix. It will be a place for business people to meet, grab breakfast or lunch, get that midmorning pick-me-up capp or latte. You get the idea. If you are coming to the Southeast Reg. Barista Jam, we could discuss it more in depth.
OK no one has put in a good word for super automatic machines yet, which I find very surprising.
Espresso Rescue said:OK no one has put in a good word for super automatic machines yet, which I find very surprising.
If you found that "surprising," you must have thought you joined "PeopleWhoPushButtonsOnVendingMachinesExchange." This is a barista-oriented forum. You will find a more receptive audience to flog your superautos on general coffee retailer sites.
ou can always upgrade later once you have mastered the other stuff.
Are you enjoying Barista Exchange? Is it helping you promote your business and helping you network in this great industry? Donate today to keep it free to all members. Supporters can join the "Supporters Group" with a donation. Thanks!
© 2024 Created by Matt Milletto. Powered by