Coffee pot
Author
Discussion

LordGrover

Original Poster:

34,110 posts

238 months

Friday 18th October 2019
quotequote all
I've been using a cone filter for my coffee for quite a while now, and have somehow managed to lose my aluminium Moka pot.

Popped onto Amazon to order a replacement and see different makes ranging from Bialetti at £26 to Vinecraft at £7. Is the Bialetti that much better, or are they simply commanding a higher price because pukka Italian?

Edit: fix typo

Edited by LordGrover on Friday 18th October 12:50

Sporky

11,001 posts

90 months

Friday 18th October 2019
quotequote all
Not quite an answer to your question, but I switched to a Bialetti steel moka pot a while back and much preferred it.

Trophy Husband

3,924 posts

133 months

Friday 18th October 2019
quotequote all
Only use Bialetti.

We have 3 or 4 different sizes. There's something really special about how they work!

Ritchie335is

2,058 posts

228 months

Monday 21st October 2019
quotequote all
I used one of these for a long time and liked it, however I couldn't help feeling that the coffee was a bit "burnt" due to the requirement for the water to be boiling pretty furiously before it went through the tube and the coffee.
I always thought that coffee shouldn't be made with boiling water in order to keep the smoothness of it and to prevent it tasting too bitter.
Am I talking bks?

paua

8,211 posts

169 months

Monday 21st October 2019
quotequote all
Have a quality stainless version of the same basic ( alu) design (can no longer see the label ), have had it about 20 years. Used every day. Faultless.

anonymous-user

80 months

Monday 21st October 2019
quotequote all
Ritchie335is said:
I used one of these for a long time and liked it, however I couldn't help feeling that the coffee was a bit "burnt" due to the requirement for the water to be boiling pretty furiously before it went through the tube and the coffee.
I always thought that coffee shouldn't be made with boiling water in order to keep the smoothness of it and to prevent it tasting too bitter.
Am I talking bks?
My wife and I are new to stove top coffee makers, but they make a great companion when you're camping and have limited access to electric.

I now 'cook' our coffee on a low gas mark, we noticed if you had the flames licking up the side of the pot that although you got a pot of brewed coffee very quickly it had a slightly charred taste. We now brew low and slow, not sure if emperors new clothes, but I think it tastes less bitter.

Tannedbaldhead

3,145 posts

158 months

Friday 25th October 2019
quotequote all
Coin Slot. said:
Ritchie335is said:
I used one of these for a long time and liked it, however I couldn't help feeling that the coffee was a bit "burnt" due to the requirement for the water to be boiling pretty furiously before it went through the tube and the coffee.
I always thought that coffee shouldn't be made with boiling water in order to keep the smoothness of it and to prevent it tasting too bitter.
Am I talking bks?
My wife and I are new to stove top coffee makers, but they make a great companion when you're camping and have limited access to electric.

I now 'cook' our coffee on a low gas mark, we noticed if you had the flames licking up the side of the pot that although you got a pot of brewed coffee very quickly it had a slightly charred taste. We now brew low and slow, not sure if emperors new clothes, but I think it tastes less bitter.
This and use milder blends.

DoubleSix

12,431 posts

202 months

Friday 25th October 2019
quotequote all
Used them all the time when i lived in Spain, but a cafetière is less faff and produces great coffee if you don’t skrimp

DoubleSix

12,431 posts

202 months

Friday 25th October 2019
quotequote all
Oh and btw, if it’s tasting bitter/burnt you’re leaving it on too long.

Use boiling water in the chamber and remove from hob sooner, the pressure should keep the brew going.

sleepezy

2,084 posts

260 months

Saturday 26th October 2019
quotequote all
I have three - one large Bialetti, one medium Tesco's and one small that's so old I've no idea.

They all work as well as one another - but the non-Bialetti ones have had their filters and gaskets replaced with Bialetti spares (as the originals got so worn). The gasket is the only piece I can think that could be 'better quality' in reality, although the handle on my smallest is slowly but surely melting.

I switch off heat as soon as the pot starts bubbling - agree it can seem bitter if you leave any longer but if you turn it off in time you get the best flavor.