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Espresso Rescue said:Isn't the Dalla Corte and PID'd Marzocco halfway there? Just because a few steps in the process are taken out does that make the barista an automatron? How far does a machine have to be "tricked out" before it is not artisan? I'm trying to see where the line is. The general public is pretty accepting of advances in technology and would enjoy a morning conversation with the preparer of their drink regardless of how they are preparing it. That's where the magic is and that's where cafes can separate themselves from fast food chains.
You know, I'm really not interested in your debate. It's neither here nor there. The original poster asked about semi-auto machines and you've decided to make this some diatribe about super-autos. Personally, if Super-Auto is your choice and you're happy with that choice, then more power to you. Your path is one of less training, less cost, greater ease and lower overall costs. It's not the path my company chooses.
While adding functions such as PID controllers may be a common thread between the new generation of espresso machines and the super-auto versions, the super-autos remain push-button efficient - where you simply press the button and the machine does everything for you. Perhaps the new generation of semi-auto machines are "halfway" there, but it's that "halfway" that still makes the difference between a push-button "barista" and that of the craftsman Barista.
If you can't see that difference then that is where the divide between you and me lies, and forever it shall remain.
Awwwww, Bry! You get me, man! For the record, I should clarify, I am not an experienced barista. I am an obsessive beginner who is nuts about coffee, and who has spent the last four years as a sales manager in a family-owned bakery. I only "know" what I have learned here and at SCAA-Atl regarding espresso, etc. But I know my customers. I am the guy that sees the white Caddy at 6:30 AM on Thursday and starts boxing up the good doctor's order. I am the guy that feels slighted when a local geezer columnist in our local paper forgets to mention our 31 year old bakery when he writes a column about donuts he has know in his 69 years. That's a feeling of ownership. I am also the guy who brings some of James Spano's Tanzanian Peaberry to work, from my own stash, to make French press for my coworkers, who then start using the term, "mouth-gasm", etc. The expression in someone's eyes when they taste floral and fruit notes in coffee, PRICELESS! Oh, yeah, that was a plug for my roaster buddy...Cup to Cup Coffee in Savannah, GA! Spano rocks the Roast! Hmmmmm....starting to get thirsty again...
Rescue, I really meant no disrespect. You are entitled to your opinion. But I have had espresso from Starbucks. NASTY! I know it isn't just the machine, and like Bry, I think that with a really good single origin (pssst...where's Kayakman?) , or blend, you could get a much more drinkable shot. But it's a direction counter to everything I want in my shop. I am even toying with the idea of not offering pump pots of coffee after the morning rush, simply because pourover or Chemex is more economical and less wasteful. I really want a pour over bar...and I see Chi-town's Intelli is doing that now...
I might as well shove a shiv in my neck and kill myself (or go back to making movies).
Jay Caragay said:I might as well shove a shiv in my neck and kill myself (or go back to making movies).
...and the difference would be.....???
haha, just kidding jay.
-bry
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.
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