I've been looking at a Wega Polaris 2 grp to open my cafe because of price. Although, this is not my ideal starter machine. There is an Astoria/Wega company based 45 minutes from me, so that helps. I know this isn't a typical cafe setting machine.
Any advice about this machine is really appreciated. I just need a workhorse that's great to open with to produce a great product.
Thanks,
Jennifer
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Yes. I've done my research and presented them to the owners. Their budget is insanely tight so we have to start with this one because they found a great deal. But after being open 6 months or so, I can get what I want.
I'm curious why no one really knows about the Wega? It's made at an Astoria plant...and mainly sold in Europe and just now selling in the U.S. recently. I understand if no one has really had any experience with it.
I have no other option for opening. I just hope it can produce a great product.
Well if you want a workhorse get a used lenea , Dont really know about Wega but i my opinion it is better to buy a used lenea then a cheap new machine.
it mayby worth to invest a little more in you machine
You will simply have to do a flush on the groups before you pull the shot. When a heat exchanger machine sits for a little bit the first water out of the group often turns to steam. You just have to flush the group until the first bit of real water comes out. 2-3 seconds. That will bring the temp down to the 202 range or so. You will actually have to experiment with how much to flush out to get the best extractions. If you don't flush the grouphead before pulling a shot the superheated, pressurized water will actually attack the celluose in the coffee and extract some pretty bitter and flat flavors. E-61 grouphead machines are sometimes set up with a needle valve that can control how fast the water circulates through the heatexchanger. You should find out if this model has that ability and work with your tech to get it set to a temp that gets you good results. If it doesn't have that ability then the flush will be your only means of temerature control.
Apart from the espresso machine what kind of grinder will you be using? The grinder will actually make a bigger differance in your product quality. Luckily grinders are less expensive than espresso machines and you will get a MUCH bigger bang for your buck by stepping up a level or two in your grinder choice.
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