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  • Moka Pot Guide: How to Use a Stovetop Espresso Maker

    Moka Pot Guide: How to Use a Stovetop Espresso Maker

    The moka pot makes intense, concentrated coffee — but it isn't espresso, and treating it like espresso is the fastest way to ruin a cup. This is how the device actually works, the grind and heat that suit it, and how to get the best from one without burning it.

  • vertical photo of aeropress being used to brew coffee

    AeroPress Espresso-Style Coffee: Is It Actually Espresso?

    Is AeroPress espresso actually espresso? No. Real espresso runs at 9 bar of pressure; an AeroPress manages around 0.5. But the AeroPress can produce a concentrated, low-acid base that works beautifully in milk drinks, and that's worth knowing how to make properly.

  • espresso shot sitting on wooden countertop

    How to Make Espresso at Home Without a Machine

    You can't make real espresso without a machine — anyone telling you otherwise is selling something. But you can make the concentrated coffee most people actually want when they say "espresso at home," and several methods get you there. Honest pros and cons for each.

  • Moka Pot vs Espresso Machine: What's Actually the Difference?

    Moka Pot vs Espresso Machine: What's Actually the Difference?

    $40 for a moka pot or $1,200 for an espresso setup? They make different coffee. Both can be excellent. Neither replaces the other. Pressure, crema, grind, milk drinks, daily use — the moka pot versus espresso machine question told straight.

  • espresso shot being pulled into single espresso glass

    How Pressure Affects Coffee Extraction (And Why It Matters at Home)

    Most home coffee writing skips pressure entirely, which is a mistake. Pressure changes what gets extracted, how fast, and what the cup tastes like. Understanding it makes you better at every brewer you'll ever touch — espresso, moka pot, AeroPress, pour-over.

  • two espresso shots being pulled with thick crema

    Channeling in Espresso and Pour-Over: Causes and Fixes

    Channeling is one of the most common causes of bad espresso and inconsistent pour-over. Here's what it is, how to spot it, and exactly how to fix it.