The Bialetti Moka Express (Episode #1)

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*The competition for the "Coffee Makers" book ended on 12th January 2022 and David from the USA was the winner!

Music:
"Luxury" by Mullaha

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After my grandparents passed away, we were cleaning their old house as the family decided to sell it. There was a box in which "trash" was supposed to go in. In there I spotted the distinctive black handle. One of my aunts had dumped the Bialetti because she thought it was missing parts, simple as it is. I rescued it, gave it the love it deserves, and 8 years later I still use it on daily basis. My grandfather bought that Bialetti on a trip to Italy in the large 60's.

pueblananuk
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The last birthday gift I had from my dyeing grandmother was $20 or so. I was extremely close to her. I chose to buy something I would own forever. It was the same Moka Express in this video. Coming from a Cuban household, these were in our homes as well. While she has been gone for many years now, I still own and cherish that Moke Express I purchased with the money she gave me that birthday. Awesome video!

racer
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My moka pot story: I’m a Canadian who landed in Rome Italy on March 2nd 2020, with a plan to explore the country over the following 3 months. 1 week later the country was in lockdown, my flight home was cancelled, and I was alone in an apartment.
I reached out to a barista back home, and he told me to check the cupboards for a moka pot - I found three. Fortunately, I also found your instructional video on how to make a great coffee with it (and have been a devoted follower ever since). As it was well over 2 months before coffee bars reopened, I was ever so grateful for the moka pot.
This past spring, my lovely Roman AirBnB host sent me my very own Bialetti - for great coffee and great memories. Will be treasured for many years to come.

shelbyshawn
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My dad had one when I was a young child. Because it was metal adn durable, they did not care if I played with it, taking it apat and putting it back togetehr again. It was also easy to play with since it was light. It was my moonbase and spacecraft. The whole thing was like a lunar lander with the top part able to disengage and blast off.

ycplum
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As an italian the moment of having a coffee is a social time. Everyone tends to congregate in the kitchen and drink the coffee in there and have a quick chat, sometimes we bring the coffee to people in other rooms but usually everyone go in the kitchen to drink it.
The smell of coffee in the morning and after lunch is something that sticks with us forever. Sharing a cup of coffee with family or friends it is truly one of the best things in life, it gives that sense of belonging and love that everyone deserves.
Lately I have been discovering even thanks to people like James other method of brewing and I have been using my Bialetti's moka less, but everytime I brew coffee with that and I smell the coffee and hear the sounds at the end of the brew it alwyas remind me of my family and my home back in Italy.
Thank you James for your passion and you incredible knowledge and most of all thank you for sharing this with us.

ccio
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I’ve never seen the Moka pot until I visited Italy, where I lived there for three months playing opera in a small town in the Dolomites. The opera orchestra arranged apartments for the musicians in cooperation with locals there, and the man who owned the apartment I stayed in was eager to show me around the apartment. When we got to the kitchen, he enthusiastically pointed to the mocha pot and showed me how to make coffee with it. I went on over the next three months to make coffee only in the mocha pot enjoying the drink on the balcony of my Italian apartment. When I returned to the United States, I immediate searched for one and bought it. Every time I use it, I’m transported back to Italy and back to the sweet memories that made me love the ritual of making coffee.

Yehezkel
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As many Italians, moka pot was the only way we used to brew coffee at home, when I was a child. As you may know, in Italy we use only dark roasted beans. One tip I developed to make better coffee with moka, using dark roasted beans, is to switch off the fire when the extraction is not complete yet. Particularly, I don't want the coffee that goes out when the water is mixed with air and you can hear the famous hum
of the moka pot. This gives me a more balanced cup without those flavors of ash and burnt wood you have with dark roasted beans in a moka pot. I think it is related to the fact that the temperature of the water at the end of the extraction with a moka pot is a bit higher then what you want with some kind of coffee. Actually, I'm really curious if future video about moka will confirm this theory.

robertoparisella
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My parents came to the us in 1969 from Italy, they worked hard and my dad worked night and day to provide for us. my mom and dad were inseparable and old traditions were big in my family growing up as a kid. If my dad was coming home late my mom would have food ready for him, she would put a flat plate over the bowl of pasta to keep it warm. The Bialetti coffee was big in my house and again traditional things like that are still big in my parents house now. My dad turned 85 yesterday congrats dad!!! The one thing I remember and brings me back to my child hood the sound the spoon makes when stirring the cup. I would be in bed my parents up at 430 and I can remember my bedroom and hear the spoon stirring the cup!!! Im 50 ys old and even today I bring my self back to my childhood with the power of the spoon memory!! I enjoy your videos very much thanks!!!

guiseppebordone
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As an Italian, I can confirm that EVERYBODY has at least a Moka at home, and it's common to have two or three of different sizes. Just recently coffee machines started becoming more popular, but the tradition of a good old Moka coffee lives strong in rural areas and among the elderly.

Dany-uwhf
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A little bit of history for you, coffee was actually invented as a beverage by the Arabs who used it as a stimulant especially in the morning. The first type of bean to be roasted were called Arabica beans and are still used today in some shape or form.

After the failed conquest of Vienna in the 16th century, when the Ottoman soldiers fled the battlefield following their defeat, they left behind many items. One of these items was a dark hot beverage which the captured soldiers called Qawwah. None of the European soldiers seemed interested in this “foreign stuff” except for the Italians. It was the Italians who were intrigued with this new hot drink. They questioned the captured soldiers on how to make this drink and this is the drink we know and love today. Qawwah became Kaffa, then Cafe and then coffee.

Thanks again for another brilliant video James. ☕️

abuhamza
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Circa in 2008, Bialetti and Illy collaborated to develop an improved version of the classic Moka Express. The result of this joint effort was commercialized under the name of Cuor di Moka (Heart of Moka). It presented indeed a huge series of improvements with respect to the original design, in particular, a better (silicon) handle and a refined locking system, but more interestingly, a valve-controlled brewing able to regulate the speed and to cut the last part of the extraction (usually the burned one in the traditional, Sunday lunches in Italy..). Moreover, a hiss produced with the deviated vapor pressure advised that the coffee was ready. Finally, the Moka was thicker to maintain the coffee temperature. Unfortunately, problems with the valve mechanism (I guess, I have many of them) eventually lead it out of production. In my opinion, it was really the peak of quality in a Moka brewer. Really worth the effort, and to buy one if you can find it somewhere..

jakomovie
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While I was doing my PhD research in London, a postdoc researcher from Sicily joined our lab. Every day, upon returning to the lab after lunch, he would prepare a delicious moka pot over a Bunsen burner.

paulkaye
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My Nona always made coffee with one of these, her kitchen always smelled amazing. She would even make coffees for me and my sister as kids!
When the pandemic began, I moved back to my parents' house and my Nona lived nearby in the same village (In England), so I got to see her more regularly and she always wanted a coffee made with the moka express when she visited. A few months into the pandemic, she contracted the virus and passed away. I make me and my dad a coffee every day since, both to keep Nona's routine alive and to create a new routine to share with my dad.

robertszynal
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Opening B-roll is absolutely glorious, had to rewach it a few times. Not the first time I'm thinking that either. Go production team!

gabrielhaggebrink
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Growing up, the moka pot was what my parents had coffee from at the end of every dinner. At the age of 6, when my mom was off to the hospital to have my younger brother, I proudly took on the role of making my dad his evening coffee. And we had so many moka pots, different shapes and sizes. When I was 24, and finally made my first trip to Italy, I bought myself my very own pot. And use it to this day, 30 years later. It really does make a great cup of coffee.

mariaromanelli
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45-years ago as a starving student I found a Moka in a second hand store. Used that thing every day for years. I can't imagine how many coffee makers I've owned through the years but I've had that Moka Express for all that time. Still works too. Ended up using it when we lost power last year for 5 days. Only other coffee maker I can think of that's as iconic as the Moka Express is a French Press type coffee maker.

PhotoFlight
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I started brewing with the moka express, to end my hiatus from caffeine, the month my daughter was born. As a sleep deprived parent, I couldn't go caffeine free anymore. I cannot recall why I landed on the moka express, but the coffee it makes has kept it at the front of my brewing rotation ever since. Its a wonderful reminder for me of the early days when my daughter was just a little baby. One of my most tangible reminders that the days are long, but the years so short.

jasonrusch
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The first time I ever had coffee from a moka pot was actually from an old housemate of mine from Milan. This was about 4 years ago now. But it was the day he had moved in and I came into the kitchen to see one of those aluminium pots sitting on our hob, brewing away. Without even asking, after greeting each other, my new housemate Alessandro grabbed an extra mug and poured a coffee for me too. Almost like it was his and, as I came to understand later after befriending more Italians, an Italian's way of being hospitable and friendly. It was a very wholesome moment between two strangers, and new housemates, and it was a damn memorable cup of coffee.

Nikelaos_Khristianos
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When I was a teenager in the 80’s, I went to a friend’s house after high school and he made me a cup of coffee in a Moka pot. It was the first time I can recall ENJOYING coffee rather than tolerating coffee. It is now my primary method for making hot coffee as an adult. Everyone else can become a pod person but I’ll keep brewing in a Moka pot till I die! And I also clean mine after every use.

Stunbunny
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The first time I used one of these was many years ago in my early 20s. I forgot to install the top filter, put it on the stove and left the room. A few minutes later there was a very loud BOOM and when I returned there was a single ground of coffee, every centimetre, floor to ceiling, in that very large kitchen. After that incident including many hours of cleanup, it was smooth sailing ever since. Love this design, and go back to it often. I freaked out about the aluminum, so now I own a Bialetti in stainless. It makes lovely coffee, and it provides endless opportunities to tinker with the grind, time, quantity, flame size, and water parameters. 😊

Alex-von-Tiesenhausen