Home | Hello guest,
New Customer? About Us | Contact Us | Help Center
Trusted Guarantee Fast Shipping
Become Our Fan Follow Us Shopping Cart (0)

Mr. Coffee ECM20 Steam Espresso Maker

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Mr. Coffee ECM20 Steam Espresso Maker

Product Details

  • Product Dimensions: 12 x 8.8 x 12.8 inches ; 5 pounds

  • Shipping Weight: 6 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)

  • Shipping: This item is also available for shipping to select countries outside the U.S.

  • Shipping Advisory: This item must be shipped separately from other items in your order. Additional shipping charges will not apply.

  • ASIN: B0002L34KK

  • Item model number: ECM20


By : Mr. Coffee
Price : $39.99
Mr. Coffee ECM20 Steam Espresso Maker

Product Description


Mr. Coffee Espresso and Cappuccino maker.Steam pressure brewing. Powerful milk frother.

 

Mr. Coffee ECM20 Steam Espresso Maker

 

Product Features

  • Measures 12 by 9 by 14; 1-year limited warranty

  • 3 way select knob allows for separate brewing and frothing

  • Removable drip tray for easy clenaing

  • Steam pressure brewing

  • Measuring scoop and tool included

Mr. Coffee ECM20 Steam Espresso Maker

Customer Reviews


I have read so many negative reviews of this wonderful little moka machine, I must put in my 2 cents. First, this is a stream machine, meaning it makes moka not espresso. If you like Bialetti but want cappuccino instead of cafe latte, then this is perfect. The grind must be close to espresso, finer than for Bialetti, and you must tamp it down, but no tamper included. There is only 1 knob, yes it is stiff, but i don't have arthritis. The round design makes it easy to handle even though it is very light. It descales with...vinegar! How about that, actually a traditional machine. The panarello works, just put in extra "cup" of water for steaming. Make 2 "cups", not 1 or 4, and always start with cold machine, or use very, very cold water. Stop the brewing as soon as moka hits 2 "cups" or it starts to steam instead of brew, then switch the knob to steam for the milk. If you don't, coffee will taste slightly burned. I have owned espresso and moka machines from USD5 to USD1,000 over a period of 40 years. If you like moka, don't waste money on anything more expensive. But, like any machine, read the manual, and experiment if things don't work the way you want. Finally, garbage in garbage out. If you want great cappuccino, use good organic coffee and organic milk.

I picked this product up at a local store for mid $20's after getting sick of making my coffee with a stove top espresso machine. I couldn't see spending $100+ for something conceptually as simple as an espresso machine. I know someone who got a simple Krupps machine for about $40 years ago and it still works just great. But since I couldn't find anything else in the sub $40 range, I settled on this one.
It makes a fine cup of coffee if you just want to use prepackaged coffee grinds or you use a basic coarse to medium grind. BUT, when I tried to use a very fine grained "espresso" grind on my beans, almost nothing came out. It seems that too fine a grind stops up the filter holes and the machine just doesn't have the oomph to force the water/steam through.
Also, it does suffer from
- a very difficult to turn knob (don't get this product if you have arthritis)
- a caraf lid that won't stay on let alone stay properly oriented
So basically, it's good for making a medium to fairly strong cup of coffee (by my subjective measure), but if you really want something strong and sludgy, this machine won't do the trick unless you want to wait for an hour for it to eventually push enough liquid through.
I guess now I understand why espresso machines aren't cheap. Years of using a really simple stovetop espresso maker led me to believe that they're really simple machines. But perhaps when you try to package it up as an appliance it isn't so straight forward.

 

Mr. Coffee ECM20 Steam Espresso Maker

 

View

0 comments:

Post a Comment