So far it’s a bit on the weak side compared to same beans doing pour over.

I’ll try grinding a notch finer and longer slower brew. It may be partly a matter of seasoning the new pot too.

Any other tips from Bialetti vets?

I am happy to report, having bounced off of aluminum moka pots in the past due to metallic taste, this steel Bialetti one does not have that issue.

Perka-perka y’all!

  • ryeonwheat@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I’m shocked that it’s weaker than pour over; I didn’t think a moka pot was capable of that. Are you filling the bottom chamber to just below the safety valve or going over it?

    When I grind for my pot I grind finer than I would for a pour over. How fine have you been grinding?

    • Cid@lemmy.sdf.orgOP
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      1 year ago

      Just below valve. Tried several grinds, hot and cold starts. No significant effect.

      BUT, as mentioned under other comment, watching Hoffman and Wired Gourmet’s vids helped a lot.

      Apparently the default Mokka pot guidance just results in sub-par coffee. But probably good enough for casual drinkers.

      I’m past the rubicon on coffee expectations though. It wasn’t cutting it for me.

      Main thing seems to be stop brewing before you hit the famous sputtering gurgle. Either less water in or just stop the heat once you hit goal volume.

      With optional fussiness around moving pot on/off heat to manage temperature and flow.

      Fussy town. But that’s where I live.

      • ryeonwheat@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        I have used a Tupperware full of tap water to stop the brew process. That’s slightly less fussy than hovering it over heat. Worked pretty well.