What Jessie Did Next...

...being the inane ramblings of a mundane Yorkshire bird.

Some time back my Gaggia Baby-D coffee machine died in a leaky can’t-maintain-pressure-and-piss-water-everywhere way. It was a sad loss mourned in our house given that Gaggia-the-company had also died and been taken over by Philips who weren’t honouring warranties, especially not on the ‘refurb’ unit I owned. I resorted to making espresso on the hob using my Italian espresso pot but I really missed the steamer and the convenience of it all.

Meantime, over on a UK techies maillist there was a discussion of bean-to-cup machines. Nicky and I had a few savings from birthdays and anniversaries and I talked her into letting me buy a DeLonghi-branded Magnifica ESAM4200. That was back in July; I figured I’d let the dust settle before I blogged any sort of review of it, but the short version is that I like it 🙂

It’s a nice unit, and tends to do everything for you including cleaning itself (an absolute boon as far as I’m concened – dismantling and cleaning the Gaggia was one of the onerous pains, especially since bits of it weren’t dishwasher-safe). Beans go in the hopper in the top, and it chucks out little coffee-poos into a box inside once finished.

It’s also fast – powerup to dispense is less than 30 seconds, and the steamer is ready within 15s from pressing ‘the button’. Thanks to this, if the daughter forgets to switch it on in a morning (the usual state of affairs) I can still grab a very quick coffee before work. In that regard, it’s quicker than the kettle if a little noisier with its ‘clunk’ and ‘whirr’ and ‘grrrtangfrrrrvvvv’.

As for coffee control itself, it’s pretty flexible – there’s the usual quantity and strength dials on the front, as well as a hidden knob to alter the grinder so the beans can be coarse or fine (I’ve left it on the default setting). It’s consistent and reliable, leaving a rather delicious-looking crema on the top every time. The coffee I’ve been using is the 1kg sacks of beans from CostCo (Starbucks brand) – although if you really want you can use pre-ground coffee just by moving the strength dial all the way back.

There’s a couple of things which are a bit tedious: the grinds disposal bin isn’t big enough so after six or seven shots it still needs emptying; similarly the water tank is a bit small (and it uses water on startup/shutdown to clean itself so doesn’t last very long). Keeping a jug or an old mug under the spout is mandatory as it dispenses a small amount of water whenever it cleans itself and the driptray could get full (and is more hassle to clean than a mug!). It’s a bit noisy, but the build quality is much better than the Gaggia though and seems to cope with the amount of coffee I require it to throw out on a daily basis.

It’s also important to set the water hardness correctly on installation – I waited (well, to be fair I didn’t read the instructions properly) and it nagged me for a descaler cycle after a month when it didn’t need it. Once that was triggered there was no way of telling it to stop nagging without doing a full descale which takes about an hour and requires the DeLonghi-specified descaler solution (or it invalidates your warranty).

If you want one of these units I’d recommend shopping around: for example, John Lewis list them at £399, but I managed to get it sub-£300 by going online to Amazon (though at time of writing they don’t seem to have any available direct). Still, recommended and seems to have been a good buy!

9 Comments

  1. What’s the ideal amount of coffee to use per cup of water in a French … I don’t know if there’s an ideal ratio since this is really about how strong

  2. MikeW (yes that one)

    October 18, 2011 at 1:51 pm

    We got a Jura Ena 5 at less than half price late last year. Predictable and very simple to use, though haven’t found the ideal beans to use yet.

  3. PS Jess, can’t you make the email links obfuscated ?

  4. OK, on the basis of your performance test, just timed the E5 from cold (off all night) to final droplet of standard-size normal-strength brew, is 1:35.
    As you say, if you are on the way out – and just got up ! – then come downstairs, hit the power button, do other things for just over a minute [find shoes and car keys ?], then stick the cup in place and hit the Go button.
    Almost quicker than boiling a kettle for Instant, as long as the water tank has some in !

    Anyway at least I no longer now gravitate to the kitchen section when in John Lewis and compare bean-to-cup machine specs and prices 🙂

  5. After a lot of deliberation I have purchased an EAM 4200 for Christmas and after trying it with about 8 cups the disposal bin light came on and when I removed it there did not seem to be a lot of grains in the bin. After cleaning and replacing everything the warning light for the bin has stayed on and after removing and refitting numerous times it is still on and the machine does not work. Having rung Di Longhi on Friday morning, the 23rd of December, I listened to a recording telling me that everybody is off for the Bank Holiday. Thanks very much. Brand new machine that does not work so a very merry Christmas to all at the Company and my friends will now carry on drinking the instant out of the jar. What a load of rubbish.

  6. Just had the same problem rang Delonghi spoke to a very helpful lady who told me to unplug the machine from the wall and leave to stand for a couple of hours. Then switch back on as normal and it worked.

    Instant coffee does not taste the same!!.

  7. I have ordered the same coffee machine from http://www.coopelectricalshop.co.uk/ , they offered fantastic price, just £259.00 incl next day delivery, But…. never get the item, spend £20 to call to coopelectricalshop regarding refund, they have terrible service, you can not open payment dispute , all payments online are processed direct via cooperative bank, now Delonghi beans to cup coffee maker Just my dream .

  8. I love the Delonghi machines. I’ve been writing reviews of them myself as I’m pretty passionate about coffee machines (automatic). Lovely write up – good to know there are many coffee lovers out there. 🙂

Leave a Reply to Jearmaine Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published.

*

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.