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Playing with pressure is kind of like the new thing to doin coffeeland. The point of pressure profiling, as it’s called, is to pull different qualities out of espresso by manipulating the pressure during the extraction process.

While the Strada isn’t the first machine to do variable pressure profiles (there’s the Slayer, for instance), the vast majority of decent coffee places have a La Marzocco machine sitting on the bar, so LM’s entrance into the game is a big deal. It’ll likely make this particular bit of coffee nerdery more widespread, and as the NYT’s Oliver Strand points out, stoke interest in a single-origin espressos. (The typical espresso shot is made from a blend of coffees; single-origin coffees come from, well, a single origin. They tend to be bit more oddball in their flavour makeup as espresso, versus perfectly balanced blends.)
La Marzocco is showing off two prototype models: The Strada M.P. is a manual paddlewheel machine, like the aforementioned Slayer, where pressure’s adjusted with a sliding paddle that sits on top of the grouphead. (It’s the black-accented machine in the gallery.) The E.P., hot-rot red here, is fully programmable with an electronic variable pump – it even has a USB cable for downloading and uploading settings.
LM’s pegging the final units for the fall, but high end places are already fighting to be the first to get one. No doubt I’ll be one of the first to line up, at least after the place has a week to figure out how to use it. [La Marzocco]





















Ugh. Who needs coffee when all you care about is the machine you make it in.
This is like getting excited about driving but never leaving your garage.