• Home
  • Archives
  • Contact
  • Gallery
  • Links
  • Sitemap
Subscribe: Posts | Comments | E-mail
  • Arts & LettersCaffeinated commentary
  • CoffeeO, dark impenetrable nectar
  • Coffee ReviewsMy coffee can beat up your coffee
  • Life in VermontA state of mind.
  • Original FictionWriting beyond the blog.

Bloggle

Posted on August 2, 2006 - by deCadmus

The Coolest Brewer You Never Heard Of?

Coffee

Bodum has done it again… in spite of themselves. The Bodum Mocca Brewer ups the ante on the traditional Italian stovetop espresso maker in much the same way that the eSantos Vac Pot raised the bar for the traditional vacuum coffee maker. At the same time they’ve made such a mess of marketing the new brewer it’s a wonder they’re actually selling any of them. (I’ll get to that in a bit…)Bodum Mocca Brewer

You’re no doubt familiar with the Bialetti stovetop espresso maker — you may know it as a moka pot — long the staple of little Italian grandmothers, everywhere. Dead simple and robustly made, it’s not unusual for these little coffee makers to be handed down from one generation to the next. ‘Course, they’re cheap (read, inexpensive) enough it’s an altogether sentimental thing. You can buy one for your stovetop, buy another to use exclusively on camping trips (they make great camp coffee) and buy one for Nonna to have as a spare and you’ll *still* get change for a 50 dollar bill.

That’s not to say there isn’t room for improving the traditional stovetop espresso maker. Firstly they’re a bit of a bugger to clean (all those corners in the octagonal base can prove tricky,) and over time — depending on just what kind of water you’ve got — the aluminum can oxidize. Still, it’s nothing some elbow grease and a pot or two to re-season things won’t fix. However… you do need a stove-top. Or a hot-plate, or — did I mention? — a campfire. Finally, if — like me — you don’t *have* a little Italian grandmother to school you, it can be a rather haphazard learning experience to know just when a traditional stovetop espresso maker is finished brewing. And, er… messy, too.

Bodum scores on all three marks: materials, heat source, and — maybe most important — making the brewing process transparent. Quite literally, as it happens.

Let’s begin with materials. The Bodum Mocca sports a stainless base — a *round* one — that’s easy to clean. Like the eSantos, it features a corded base that uses induction to heat the contents of its cordless pot, and the base features electronics that turn the espresso maker off — automatically — when the brew cycle is done. Finally — and again like the eSantos — the Mocca makes really good use of heat-safe polycarbonate so you can *see* the brewing cycle. It’s not just a coffee brewing appliance, it’s kitchen-counter theater! (And it doesn’t really need a kitchen… which makes this an office- and travel-friendly accessory.)

The result? Identical in every way to what you’d achieve with a traditional stovetop espresso maker… rich, dense, strong espresso-style coffee. With crema. A wee little bit, anyway. Stovetop espresso makers *do* brew under pressure, but it’s not quite the same as what you’d get with a pump-driven espresso machine, and that’s okay. So long as you understand the analog is to Bialetti, and not to say, La Marzocco, then you’ll be perfectly content with the Mocca.

Which brings us to Bodum’s problem. It would seem the folks tasked with marketing this coffee maker didn’t really understand it’s analog, themselves. Consequently, they simply labeled it as a six-cup coffee-maker. For good measure — and blissfully unaware they were talking about an espresso maker — they added, “24 ounces.” Its actually capacity, of course, is rightly measured in cups of espresso, or about 7 to 8 ounces of brewed espresso coffee.

Oops.

Worse, they continued to market the Mocca just this way on their own web site until only just a week or two ago… and because web marketers steal product copy all the day long it remained likewise unchanged on virtually every one of their online retailers. (Today I note the product is no longer in Bodum’s online catalog. Perhaps they’ve finally realized their error and have taken it offline to correct it?)

Marketing issues aside, there’s a lot to be said for this nifty little brewer, not the least of which is the great coffee it makes. This style of coffee can manifest hidden qualities of given bean… those subtle tones that might typically play bit parts and secondary roles are suddenly at center stage. I’ve just tasted the complete set of Green Mountain’s Special Reserve series all over again — yes, I’ve kept some bags of each bean in cold storage — and I’ve found new and interesting flavors in each.

At the same time, I’ve also found coffees that prove stubbornly one-dimensional. That’s not a surprise, really… a great many single-origin coffees lose their composure when pulled as an espresso shot. Same difference.

If you’re in the market for an espresso maker — and if inexpensive and user-friendly are qualities you admire over E61 group-heads and naked portafilters — you may very well be thrilled with the Bodum Mocca. I think even Nonna would approve.

More: coffee | espresso | stovetop | bodum | mocca | bialetti | review

This entry was posted on Wednesday, August 2nd, 2006 at 9:08 am and is filed under Coffee. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

4 Comments

We'd love to hear yours!



  1. Visit My Website

    August 14, 2006

    Permalink

    Bloggle: Coffee & Commentary » Article » Tasting: Two for the Small Cup said:

    [...] Meanwhile this presents something of a quandary. I now have two coffees awaiting review that in one way or another demand espresso preparation: one being specifically blended for espresso, and another that I understand really shows its stuff only when pulled as a single-origin shot. What to do? Why, brew them in a espresso pot, of course! If it’s good enough for generations of Italian grandmothers it’s good enough for me. And it just so happens I have this nifty new Bodum Mocca Brewer handy… [...]



  2. Visit My Website

    October 6, 2006

    Permalink

    anonymous said:

    Is it true that the Bodum Mocca has 9 bars of pressure (the minimum for “true” espresso) (http://www.zaccardis.com/bodum-mocca-electric-stovetop-espresso-coffee-maker.html)? I didn’t think those type of machines could produce more than like 3 bars of pressure (according to random articles on the web). Also, what type of grounds should be used with this (medium, fine, etc.)? Thanks.



  3. Visit My Website

    August 7, 2007

    Permalink

    davidc said:

    The stem inside the upper clear plastic part broke on mine. And its not covered under warranty because the warranty only covers electrical faults, and they wont even sell the upper clear part as a separate replacement part. My only option is to buy a whole new machine, which is definitly not going to happen.

    Oh well, will throw it in the rubbish now, coffee wasnt that good from it anyway.



  4. Visit My Website

    August 7, 2007

    Permalink

    deCadmus said:

    Anonymous — The amount of pressure you’ll get depends on how much heat you use, as pressure in a device like this is a function of water vapor. Will you get nine bars? I doubt it. More, I don’t know that you’d want to, ’cause I’d think that’d much more heat than brewing coffee wants.

    Davidc — Sorry ’bout the busted stem… ‘fraid I can’t offer much advice there. So far as the quality, I suspect *that’s* a matter that’s relative to your expectations. If you were hoping for *espresso* akin to the corner coffee house, you won’t find it with this brewer. But it makes a perfectly decent, strong cup that’s a suitable antidote to a daily latte addiction.



Leave a Comment

Here's your chance to speak.

  1. Name (required)

    Mail (required)

    Website

    Message

  • Hello.

    Your author.Bloggle is the online playground of Doug Cadmus, a usability guy, writer, photographer and sometime dramatist who moved to Vermont for the coffee. When not writing, reading or walking his old, blind golden retriever, he roasts coffee in his garage and is the Web Guy for Green Mountain Coffee in Waterbury, VT.
  • Currently...

    • My fantasy football team has become ye ol' picks of perdition. Oh, waily, waily, waily! 14 hours ago
    • Accomplishments for the day: (1) Rowed 15 miles. (2) Frustrated the birdseed-thieving aspirations of a chipmunk. There is no (3). 2008/11/29
    • The bird is in the brine. The Belgian Trappist is at hand. Happy Thanksgiving eve. 2008/11/26
    • I can (and do) row for more than an hour. So why does an elliptical machine kick my ass in 7 minutes and 33 seconds? 2008/11/25
  • Words, words, words.

    Bloggle Bodum Brewing Caffeine Cappuccino Climate Change Clover Coffee Brewer Coffee History Coffee House Colombia Costa Rica Cupping Customer Experience Environment Espresso Ethiopia Fair Trade Global Climate Change Green Coffee Green Mountain Guatemala Health Intelligentsia Internet Kenya Keurig La Esmeralda Organic Coffee Peets Photos Politics Roasting Rwanda SCAA Single Cup Coffee Special Reserve Starbucks Stumptown Tassimo Tasting Uganda Usability Vacuum Pot Writing

    WP Cumulus Flash tag cloud by Roy Tanck requires Flash Player 9 or better.

  • Flickr Photos

  • Featured

    • Coffee Notes from All Over by deCadmus on November 26, 2008
    • PT’s Organic Sidamo Special Prep by deCadmus on November 14, 2008
    • A Taste of Things to Come by deCadmus on November 11, 2008
    • Joy by deCadmus on November 5, 2008
    • Get Your Vote On by deCadmus on November 4, 2008
  • Recent Comments

    • Val on Keurig vs. Tassimo: A Single-Cup Showdown Update
    • JV on PT’s Organic Sidamo Special Prep
    • deCadmus on Coffee Notes from All Over
    • scully on Coffee Notes from All Over
    • Jennifer on Single Cup Coffee Showdown: Tassimo vs. Keurig
Bloggle © 2000-2008, deCadmus
A Jeezum Crow Production. Munin