- Nespresso Automatic Espresso Machine Red/Black D290
- Froth Au Lait Frothing Unit in White Milk Frother
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
13 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Great machine and system, but mediocre capsules,
By The idea of the capsules rather than using coffee beans requires some trade offs, but has lots of huge advantages. The capsules are super convenient, fast, clean and neat, attractive, and allow you to easily serve a variety of coffee blends (decaf, Latin American, African, pure Arabica, etc, which is fun). A big advantage is that they stay fresh for months at a time, so you can always have them on hand when you need them. Comparing the Nespresso system with the conventional system shows the value of convenience. Conventional machine: you have to have fresh beans, you have to have an expensive burr grinder (more counter space, more to clean, more to break down), you have to get the fineness of the grind correct, you have to measure the ground coffee accurately, you have to tamp the coffee in the holder correctly, you have to pour the correct amount of water through. This requires a large amount of time, effort, experimentation, patience, and experience. Serving a party of 10 people like this could easily take you an hour, and you are making a lot of noise and not enjoying the party, and making a big mess to clean up later. A conventional machine could never be used in your office or company kitchen, but a Nespresso machine works out very nicely in that situation. On the downside, 45 cents or more (for special editions) per shot of espresso is a little expensive compared to doing it with beans. You are limited to the Nespresso capsules, nothing else will come close to working. This means you can't try out the interesting jars of beans at your local coffee shop. There may come a day when the capsules are not available, but I don't see that happening. The big downside is the quality of the espresso produced by the capsules, and therein is my main gripe. After many years they have recently expanded their offerings from 10 varieties or 15 or so. I haven't tried all the new ones, but I didn't really like any of the old ones. Most of them include some Robusta coffee beans in the blend. That's unusual because gourmet coffee is 100% Arabica, and my opinion is the Robusta is a problem. I have to wonder if Nespresso is trying to cut costs in this most critical aspect of an otherwise first-rate system. However, once or twice a year Nespresso releases a "special blend" for a limited time. This is usually 100% Arabica. In 1998 and 1999, the special blend was very good. In 2000 it was bad but then they released another one in June 2001 that was very good. They have a new, more expensive line of coffees that I haven't yet explored. The final alternative is the "super-automatic" style machine, that with a single button push automatically grinds the beans, measures, tamps, pours the espresso, and dumps out the spent grounds. That's great but it requires fresh beans and that's a problem for me. I think maybe a food vacuum sealer might solve that problem. One final comment: Don't fool yourself into thinking that a machine at home, no matter how nice, is going to save you money at Starbucks. Nothing can replace that fad inducing experience.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
D290 vs Romeo vs others,
By DB "Doc1" (Sacramento, CA United States) - See all my reviews Downsides: 1. Capsules: yes you have to order off there website for the capsules. .49c a capsule. But shipping is fixed at $6 for no matter how much you order. Stock up. If you want to tamp and brew a wide variety, no I guess this machine is not for you...but it does have a great selection! 2. Warmth. I am used to boiling water for my french press. The coffe is hot, but I think somewhat less than what I am used to out of a coffee maker or french press. Because it is an "espresso machine" I understand that it brews 10 or so degrees less than a reg coffee. 3. Height of spout: this is one that bugs me. Had they just made it higher! many of my mugs won't quite fit. Have to have some low wider mugs. Now I also must comment on the romeo vs the d290, because I had a hard time making up my mind. Ultimately, they make the same coffee! If you want the fancy self disposer --which I agree is only one thing that could break--- then go for the extra cash. But I think the d290, has the perfect match of mechanical vs features for the money. All in all if you have the money, this really does make excellent coffee. And is so fast and easy to have a cup that you will love it.
1 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Good, but there are better choices available,
By Good machine, but I would recommend Nespresso E350 Romeo. It costs $150 more, but if you really love good espresso it worth it. You will get much more choices and better quality from Romeo and it is very easy to operate.
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