The Coffee Lab
I’m Erin, and welcome to the sixth episode of The Coffee Lab, the series where we forget coffee snobbery. The Coffee Lab is all about making coffee fun. Join me as I help you kickstart your coffee journey!
Nespresso machines get a bad rap in the coffee world, and there’s no hiding it. Coffee snobs love to hate on anything that doesn’t have a triple boiler, quadruple E61 group head, quintuple-hole steam wand.
I accept that even the best Nespresso machines can never replace the best espresso machines, like the Breville Bambino Plus (which is my one true love), but I also accept that there’s a time and a place — and a person — for pods. Every time I go to an Airbnb, I squeal with joy when I see a Nespresso machine. If you love coffee but are low on time, or you want to simplify your morning brew, there’s nothing better than a Nespresso machine.
Tiny kitchen? No problem. No time? No problem!
Picture this: you’re waking up at 6am for work, you have a tiny, apartment kitchen, and you have never watched James Hoffman. You just want hot, caffeinated coffee, and you’re not fussed about flow rates or tamping pressure.
You are perfect for a Nespresso machine. They don’t take up a lot of space — the CitiZ is 7.4 inches wide, heats up in five seconds, and makes genuinely delicious coffee in fifteen.
Not only does my CitiZ take up very little space, but it also heats up in seconds. This is great if you don’t have time to wait for your machine to heat up in the morning — let alone dose and grind your beans.
For those short on space or time, Nespresso machines are a sure-fire win.
Coffee varieties galore
I adore getting different types of coffee and trying them all out. I love single origins, blends, washed, naturally processed, light roast, medium roast — the list goes on. I just love them all. However, if I want to try all these different types of coffees, I need to buy $20 bags at a time.
With Nespresso, sure, you don’t get artisanal or specialty beans in the same way you do with wholebean, but you can try out different pods and flavors much more easily.
For example, you can get fifty Starbucks pods for $28, or you can get forty Atlas single-origin pods for $26 on Amazon. This works out much cheaper per drink — and you get to try a variety of beans without breaking the bank.
But it’s not for everyone
In no way am I claiming that Nespresso machines are the best coffee machines in the world, because that would be incredibly wrong. For people who really care about coffee perfection and flow rates, a Nespresso machine would not be ideal.
However, in a pinch, or in an Airbnb, there’s really nothing as easy as Nespresso. I really don’t think Nespresso tastes half as bad as I’ve seen it get dragged for online. The flavor depends on the pods you’re using, but I’ve never had a bad coffee from my Nespresso CitiZ. In defense of Nespresso machines — you’re not actually that bad.
I’m sorry I was so mean to you, Nespresso machines. It won’t happen again.
I post new episodes of The Coffee Lab every Friday here on Tom’s Guide, on our TikTok, YouTube and Instagram. Stay tuned for next week’s episode!
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