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e molto erotico !!

Let the home page load fully, then scroll to the bottom.

Where is the heat coming from?
you add boiling water to it
I would go a slightly lower temperature than sea level boiling point.
I think you put hot water in.

Creating really nice steamed milk is more difficult than creating an intense coffee liquid that will I enjoy.

Have you tried a manual stovetop frother? It's made of metal, and it has a plunger with a frothing head (looks like a coil-type whisk) on the end.

You fill it with milk, put it on a gas burner or electric hot plate, warm it until the milk is hot enough (around 60-65C). Then you take it off the heat and push the frother up and down until the milk is sufficiently aerated. Here's the one I have:

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000X7GF40

It produces microfoam that is at least good as those electric frothers from Nespresso etc. Not as good as a steamer wand, but close.

The manual frothers usually say that they work best with non-fat milk. Yuck.
Mine works great with whole milk, actually. I don't use anything else; lower-fat milk just isn't capable of foaming, in my experience.

(The HIC one doesn't come with any instructions and I'm pretty sure they don't say anything about the type of milk to use.)

These also work with cold milk (3C), and heating the foam in a microwave afterwards.
Cheap battery-operated spin-whisk frothers work fairly well.
Presumably boiled on a fireplace nearby; it's basically a portable version of the aeropress http://vimeo.com/40980282

It would be cool though if it could boil the water too... but that's more complicated + litigious if you get it wrong ;)

The Aeropress isn't exactly non-portable.
Cute, but I'd wait to see reviews on the espresso it makes. I have a myPressi Twist which makes outstanding espresso but it requires me to preboil the parts to bring them up to temp , the whole process is finicky if you really care about coffee. Not sure how this falls onthe curve
Also it needs compressed air capsules right? Those need to be refilled. :(
Forcing mobile users to rotate their devices to landscape mode to see the site seems like a very lazy design decision.
Even after rotating, the text was too small to read (on an iPhone 5).
I'm on a desktop PC with a rotated display and I receive the same message.
It seems to want me to rotate my monitor to view the site. Very poor design.
Hmm, I wonder if I can make tea in it. (sip)
I have never seen a tea-maker that required or used high pressure, while espresso machines always use high pressure.
That doesn't mean that tea can't be made in that way.
Neat idea, but honestly I've given up on brewing my own coffee. I now buy cold-brewed coffee (TJ's, but other brands are good also) and the acid content is much lower than hot brewed, and there is no mess or grinding involved.
I recall Phil Hendrie did an Art Bell spoof that featured a hand-crank espresso machine (for the post y2k apocalypse) that still makes me chuckle when I think about it so many years later.
A friend brought a portable espresso machine camping and it made very nice coffee. I'm pretty sure it was the http://www.handpresso.com/ . You boil water to the specified temperature (he had a hot water bottle with a temperature gauge) and pour it in the right compartment. You hand pump it up to pressure (there's a gauge). You put the grounds in the filter. Press a button and away you go.
why all the hastle? get an espresso cooker / cafetierra http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moka_pot

low tech and not a perfect espresso, but cheap, durable, no moving parts, no lubricant

This. It is a neat product, but nothing beats a mocka boiler. Lightweight, tested, well never break. I see not reason to buy this product other than me being a nerd and loving tech, but when i go on a hike i will bring a mocka boilder
Oh, they do break… I've had one explode in a newly renovated kitchen. Bent the metal vent hood above it to a frightening degree, missed my head by a foot or two and sprayed mocha onto the white walls and into every nook and cranny.

Not fun.

My moka pot is currently brewing. I'm now situated around the corner from it, shielded by a large cabinet. I've never heard of an exploding moka pot, but with all that pressure, I can understand. I'll be checking the valve after it's done!
bet you didn't need any caffeine afterwards though!
I have no idea about the quality of this specific product, but moka =/= espresso; the type of coffee that you do is different, and normally you have specific blend and type of grind for the two (if you go in a dedicated coffee shop)

Disclaimer: I am Italian, and even though I generally don't drink coffee, I've seen/heard enough moka vs espresso arguments (up to the fanboy level ;))

Have been using the Moka pot exclusively for the last 4-5yrs. Love it!

The one use case where the Moka pot fails is when you don't have access to a hot-plate/stove/fire. But in urban environments (my office) I do have access to a hot water dispenser though. So something like this would be an interesting choice for me.

and quite light (they're almost always made of aluminium) which is a plus when packing for a trek.
From the FAQ: "we spent three months to look for an alternative of the use of lubrificant for the semi-automatic piston as such substances appear to not be tasteless."

Glad to hear we'll only be drinking tasteless lubricant with our coffees!

That reads like they were looking for an alternative to using lubricant at all i.e. in their design choices.
Perhaps. It'd be interesting to see if coffee oil worked though!
I've got (an earlier model of) http://espressounplugged.com/rok Less portable, but much less fiddly than this minipresso seems to be.
How's the rok holding up? I always wanted to get one. But I read reviews that it had issues with balance and it would topple easily etc.
Does it taste like good Portuguese and Italian espresso, though?
I'm not enabling my auto-rotate screen and turning my phone sideways for this.
Seriously. If you are trying to sell something you shouldn't make demands of someone who has already kindly given their attention to you
I'm on a desktop and they're telling me to rotate my screen.
I don't know... They've applied a lot of technology to end up with something that's more complicated, slower more expensive and objectively worse (mmm lubricant) than an Aerobie AeroPress.

An AeroPress is also really simple to clean which this really doesn't seem to be.

Looks promising! I have been looking into the MyPressi (http://mypressi.com/), as it has a reputation of punching far above its weight as far as a good cup of espresso goes, but in the end I decided against it because it needs compressed gas cartridges to operate.

The Minipresso appears to rely solely on hand pumping, so I wonder if it still gives as good a result.