Our Valued Sponsor
OpinionsConsumer ReviewsGuides and How TosCoffeeGeek ReviewsResourcesForums
Members: General Off Topics
New to CoffeeGeek?  Welcome, introduce yourself!
Espresso Makers
Premium stovetop espresso makers, electric moka pots, machines & accessories.
www.espressozone.com
 
Not Logged in: Log In to Postlog in
New Topics updated topics   New Posts new posts   Unanswered Posts new unanswered  
Search Discussion Board search   Discussion Board FAQ faq   Signup sign up  
Discussions > Members > Off Topic > New to...  
view previous topic | view next topic | view all topics
showing page 13 of 23 first page | last page previous page | next page
Author Messages
CraigA
Moderator
CraigA
Joined: 19 Dec 2001
Posts: 8,192
Location: Toronto,Ontario,Canada.
Expertise: I live coffee

Espresso: PID/PressureMod 2001...
Grinder: Mazzer Major/Rio, Mazzer...
Vac Pot: Bodum Santos manual, Yama 5...
Drip: BUNN ThermoFresh BTX-B...
Roaster: BBQ roaster! Swissmar Bravi,...
Posted Wed Apr 16, 2008, 8:43am
Subject: Re: New to CoffeeGeek?  Welcome, introduce yourself!
 

burdenforasia Said:

This is a repost as I had posted in the wrong forum (whoops!) ;)
Hello everyone,
I am new to the forums and wanted to introduce myself.

Posted April 16, 2008 link

What I said there, & back at ya., Welcome the the Coffeegeek forums Sean! {;-D

Cheers!

 
Craig Andrews

Contact me on JavaChatter:
http://www.JavaChatter.com
UserId: CraigA
back to top
 View Profile Visit website Contact via AOL Instant Messenger Contact via ICQ Contact via MSN Messenger Link to this post
vongain
Senior Member


Joined: 23 Aug 2007
Posts: 1
Location: Flossmoor
Expertise: Professional

Posted Wed Apr 16, 2008, 9:24am
Subject: Re: New to CoffeeGeek?  Welcome, introduce yourself!
 

Hi,

I am new to coffeegeek and to the various parts of the coffee world.  I have enjoyed coffee since my early twenties and I am just starting to apperciate espresso.

Regards,
Vonda
back to top
 View Profile Visit website Link to this post
LAVO
Senior Member


Joined: 19 Apr 2008
Posts: 1
Location: Las Vegas
Expertise: I like coffee

Posted Sat Apr 19, 2008, 1:28pm
Subject: Re: New to coffeegeek?  Welcome, introduce yourself!
 

Hello I am writing from Las Vegas and am in search of resturants or coffee bars in Los Angeles or Sanfrancisco that do unique coffee presentations. If anyone can help let me know
back to top
 View Profile Link to this post
Eleni
Senior Member


Joined: 29 Apr 2008
Posts: 4
Location: Boston
Expertise: Just starting

Posted Tue Apr 29, 2008, 10:33am
Subject: Re: New to CoffeeGeek?  Welcome, introduce yourself!
 

Hi!  I'm a new member in the CoffeeGeek forum, although I've been reading a lot.  I'm not sure this is the forum I want, but I can at least introduce myself.  My husband and I are hoping to open up an espresso-based coffee shop north of Boston, MA, and I'm gathering all the information I can, since this is a new venture for me.  I do think it is a good idea to have a separate forum to introduce yourself.  I have questions about the coffee shop business and am wondering which forum addresses these issues.  Anyway, nice to be part of this group.  Lots of great information and support!
back to top
 View Profile Link to this post
Ariel333
Senior Member
Ariel333
Joined: 27 Jul 2007
Posts: 54
Location: Minnesota.
Expertise: I like coffee

Posted Fri May 2, 2008, 11:05am
Subject: Re: New to CoffeeGeek?  Welcome, introduce yourself!
 

Hi Everyone...thought I would introduce myself.  I was pretty active here last summer..and thought I had kind
of given up the espresso thing.  But have been visiting Starbucks more and more lately and it's garage sale season
here so I decided it's just a matter of time before I happen upon an espresso machine. Well it happened today.
Apparently these people ran some kind of restaurant because there was this HUGE La Cimbali (I think...not sure
I have that right)...the professional kind.  Well I almost fainted when I saw it and then came to my senses...it was
absolutely HUGE and there was no price (but I guarantee I couldn't have bought that one without taking out a
second mortgage). Also, my kitchen real estate wouldn't have allowed it.  A little more shopping though and there
was a little krups pump driven machine and so I brought it home.  They even let me see if it would heat up and
it did and it spit out steam and so I bought it. :) Anyway, every part that would come off (it was really dirty) is
soaking in my kitchen sink right now and I will be putting it together soon and running some citric acid through
to clean the boiler out and yay!! :) There's some pics in the espresso machines topic if you're interested.  

Anyway, hi again!! I'm back. :)

P.S. - I LOVE coffee. We tent camp, but usually end up at campgrounds with electricity and I go so far as to bring
my Senseo along...people think I'm crazy...but I'm addicted to the caffeine and I feel miserable if I don't get it
so who wants to be miserable from caffeine withdrawl when camping?  :)
back to top
 View Profile Link to this post
javanjazz
Senior Member


Joined: 13 Oct 2003
Posts: 140
Location: Edmonton (Alberta,Canada)
Expertise: I love coffee

Espresso: Moka Pot-close enuff for me!
Grinder: Solis Maestro Classic
Drip: manual pour over
Roaster: Fresh Roast +8
Posted Sun May 4, 2008, 10:47pm
Subject: Re: New to CoffeeGeek?  Welcome, introduce yourself!
 

Hey welcome to the forums Eleni! I think you'll find it worth your while to stay around.

And good of you to introduce yourself Ariel(333)...yeah, I recall seeing that screenneme around a fair bit last summer. Good luck with that Krups, sounds like it's getting a good cleaning. You'll most likely want move up to a better machine eventually(but you've gotta start somewhere).
back to top
 View Profile Link to this post
sarahpiccolo
Senior Member


Joined: 14 May 2008
Posts: 1
Location: sebastopol, CA
Expertise: I love coffee

Espresso: rancilio miss silvia
Grinder: la pavoni zip base
Posted Wed May 14, 2008, 1:16pm
Subject: Re: New to CoffeeGeek?  Welcome, introduce yourself!
 

Hi there, I just joined today and hope to master  my latest purchase : a rancilio silvia. I was given a brand spankin new grinder worth more than my machine and am a bit intimidated by it, I am not sure how to use it and hope to get advice. It is a la pavoni zip base model, I hope it is compatible with the machine that is to arrive in the mail Friday.  I am a chef/mama in Northern CA. I lived in Italy a while back and miss the joe from there but have found lots of good local roasted beans and am psyched about creating great drinks at home. I would love any advice I can get re: this grinder. I attached the plastic cone/bean holder on top and I am not sure from 0-10 what is the best grind I need. I tried twice and the ground is a bit rough. thanks,sarah
back to top
 View Profile Visit website Link to this post
Photocaffinator
Senior Member
Photocaffinator
Joined: 29 Feb 2008
Posts: 1
Location: Seattle, WA
Expertise: I love coffee

Espresso: Expobar Office Pulsar
Grinder: Rancilio
Posted Fri May 16, 2008, 12:24pm
Subject: Re: New to CoffeeGeek?  Welcome, introduce yourself!
 

Hello everyone -

I guess I'm just another Seattle coffee fanatic.  I have an ~5 year old Expobar Pulsar espresso machine with a Ranchillio Rocky grinder.  I buy most of my bean's from a custom, one pound at a time, roaster in western Washington, and enjoy most anything having to do with coffee.

I am mostly happy with my Expobar machine, though it does take a little "learning" to get the best espresso from.  It did have one feature, however, that I never appreciated and have almost from the beginning wanted to fix.  It has a 1/2 gallon water reservoir with only a little over a quart of useful storage volume if you take the machines intake and line ports positions into account.  I've always felt this was too small, limiting me to about 4 lattes before a reservoir refill is necessary.  If I am preparing coffee for a group of people, it is too easy to forget the water and run the pump dry - possibly damaging it in the process.  So, I began to look for a way to install an automatic water fill device.

Recently, I believe I was successful in my quest.  I came up with a small float valve designed for ice machines manufactured by the Roberts Manufacturing Company in Rancho Cucamonga, CA (800-877-8237; info@robertmfg.com).  Their unit (# RM292-9A-1) fits perfectly inside the Pulsar's water reservoir when mounted though the cap, and fills it to a point a safe distance below the intake line port in the back upper  left side of the reservoir.  I have a purified water supply that I already use for my refrigerator's ice machine/water dispenser, so I simply T'd into its feed line and brought the resulting branch over to my espresso machine.  I installed a water cutoff valve in the water line in back of my machine (to reduce the chance of a flood if the float valve failed) and used John Guest connectors to attach the float valve.  For tools, I needed a small adjustable wrench and a 9/16" wood boring bit to produce the necessary hole in the reservoir's cap.

The installation has been working perfectly now for about a month, and I need only to remember to turn on the water valve when I startup my machine, and shut it off again when I'm done (only for safety's sake, as I've no indication that the float valve isn't working perfectly).

Please contact for photos of the installation, if interested.

Dan
back to top
 View Profile Link to this post
jfd
Senior Member


Joined: 16 May 2008
Posts: 1
Location: NorCal
Expertise: I live coffee

Grinder: Solis
Drip: Capresso MT500
Roaster: FR8 and a PopperII
Posted Fri May 16, 2008, 12:55pm
Subject: Re: New to CoffeeGeek?  Welcome, introduce yourself!
 

Hello everyone.
New to CoffeeGeek but not coffee.  Got into home roasting about 4 yrs ago and have been hooked since.  Met some people through a cigar board that had helped me get stated.  I do most roasting with a FR8 but still make the PopperyII part of my lineup.  I really enjoy Nicaraguan and Bolivian beans, but can't say that this is anything that I dont like.  Found out that the only way to make coffee is to use a French Press so my Capresso Mt500 sits with dust collecting.  

I am a firefighter, father of 3 and husband of 1(you never know these days).  I have a small vineyard that produces a couple hundred gals a yr of Zin and Syrah.  I mentioned the cigars and I have to say that that is the one thing that I wish I could give up.  But they are just so tasty.

I hope to pick up a few tips here on the forum.  I have been in the process of revamping the fire departments coffee situation so a question my be popping up soon on how to make great coffee for 4 bucks a lb.  Stupid budgets.

Jerry
back to top
 View Profile Link to this post
Bear_B
Senior Member
Bear_B
Joined: 14 May 2008
Posts: 46
Location: Columbus, OH
Expertise: I love coffee

Espresso: Francis Francis! X1
Grinder: Breville
Vac Pot: Cona (I wish!!)
Drip: no, French press
Roaster: iRoast 2
Posted Fri May 16, 2008, 11:24pm
Subject: Re: New to CoffeeGeek?  Welcome, introduce yourself!
 

Whoops!  I guess I was supposed to post here before spouting off elsewhere!  But I just discovered this thread.

Ah, well.  I'm an academic, and therefore a chronic coffee addict of long standing.  I stumbled across the idea of roasting my own beans last winter and picked up an iRoast 2 in January after researching all of the possibilities and deciding that the ability to program the roast profile, the ability to cool down quickly, and the price made a good combination.  My first few experiments ranged from acceptable to wretched (I think I was drinking charcoal at one point), but I finally realized that the chaff collector needed to be adjusted.  After that, it was off to the races.

I am for the most part a Pacific islands and African coffee kind of guy, though I'm sometimes drawn to coffees outside of those regions.  My wife started the local Slow Food convivium in Columbus (hence the snail in my avatar, and my www link), and one of Slow Food's missions is taste education, so I'm trying to think through what a coffee taste education event or series of events might look like, once we've become established enough to draw a more substantial crowd.  I'm also the only home roaster I know in the area, so I'm offering a low-cost home roasting workshop through SFC, and if it proves to be popular I'll repeat it once in a while.

My current fixation is trying to figure out how roast profiles work.  I've posted an item on that subject in the home roasting forum, and I'm experimenting with the lowest, slowest profiles I can get out of the iRoast without stalling the roast.  (Confession:  Everyone uses that term, but I'm not at all sure I know what it means, or that I would know the taste of "baked" coffee if I tasted it.  But so far I haven't run into anything nasty or funky tasting -- well, nothing that I couldn't attribute to my own flubs!)

I'd also like at some point to figure out how to make good espresso in my wife's espresso maker, a Francis Francis X1; but there, in contrast to my regular coffee activities, where I can more or less hold my own, I seem amazingly and perhaps irredeemably incompetent.
back to top
 View Profile Visit website Link to this post
showing page 13 of 23 first page | last page previous page | next page
view previous topic | view next topic | view all topics
Discussions > Members > Off Topic > New to...  
New Topics updated topics   New Posts new posts   Unanswered Posts new unanswered     Search Discussion Board search   Discussion Board FAQ faq   Signup sign up  
Not Logged in: Log In to Postlog in
Discussions Quick Jump:
Symbols: New Posts= New Posts since your last visit      No New Posts= No New Posts since last visit     Go to most recent post= Newest post
Forum Rules:
No profanity, illegal acts or personal attacks will be tolerated in these discussion boards.
No commercial posting of any nature will be tolerated; only private sales by private individuals, in the "Buy and Sell" forum.
No cross posting allowed - do not post your topic to more than one forum, nor repost a topic to the same forum.
Who Can Read The Forum? Anyone can read posts in these discussion boards.
Who Can Post New Topics? Any registered CoffeeGeek member can post new topics.
Who Can Post Replies? Any registered CoffeeGeek member can post replies.
Can Photos be posted? Anyone can post photos in their new topics or replies.
Who can change or delete posts? Any CoffeeGeek member can edit their own posts. Only moderators can delete posts.
Probationary Period: If you are a new signup for CoffeeGeek, you cannot promote, endorse, criticise or otherwise post an unsolicited endorsement for any company, product or service in your first five postings.
Huge Variety & Discounts
Come see our huge selection of refurbs, clearance and new machines. Always no tax and free shipping.
www.aabreecoffee.com

WIPS™ Forums Software.   ©2008, WebMotif Net Services, Inc.
The WIPS Forums is customized software and part of WebMotif's WIPS Content Management System.
Home | Opinions | Consumer Reviews | Guides & How Tos | CoffeeGeek Reviews | Resources | Forums | Contact Us
CoffeeGeek.com, CoffeeGeek, and Coffee Geek, along with all associated content & images are copyright ©2000-2008 by WebMotif Net Services, Inc., all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated. Content, code, and images may not be reused without permission. Usage of this website signifies agreement with our Terms and Conditions. (1.5082430839539)
Privacy Policy | Copyright Info | Terms and Conditions | CoffeeGeek Advertisers | RSS