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26,148
4.5 out of 5 stars

Breville the Barista Express™

$359.99
$599.99 40% off Reference Price
Condition: Factory Reconditioned
Color: Stainless Steel
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Top positive review
175 people found this helpful
1st month review
By Kyvnmiller on Reviewed in the United States on May 1, 2014
Its been a month since I have bought this machine. I have not worked every coffee making device out there but I have operated and tasted many. I had just lost my Deloghni magnifca super automatic machine after seven years of use. It was a pretty good machine for being a super automatic. But I have craved to get a real espresso machine and do a proper cappuccino. I have used french presses, Vietnamese phins, drip, siphon, and single serve kuerigs. Being in the Pacific NW you would except awesome cafe's everywhere, and you would be wrong. To get a good barrista that knows what they are doing, is slim to none. So with the exit of my super auto, I shopped for a good one. I kept coming back to the breville. Only knocks it was really getting was that breville was Australian and new to the game. I took the plunge and bought it, and I do not regret it. So the good: It comes with its own grinder. It not the best, but then again its no slouch. It can be taken apart and cleaned. My super never did that. What this means is that as you build up grounds on the Burr, you can pull it apart easily and clean it. It has a hopper that you can remove and place unused beans back in its container, that is just awesome, you can make decafe then switch to a new bean. A reviewer gave a good tip that when you first run it, start at the coarse then work it to fine when you start to grind, good advice. I word of caution from me, every different roast of bean will be a new setting for the machine. If you use a oily bean, then you might have to clean the burr a lot in order to get that fine grind. Also be prepared to go through a lot of coffee to figure out the right setting to get that perfect cup. Temperature control. You can decrease or increase the temperature by 4 degree's, in 2 degree increments. Doesn't sound like much, but it can change the taste of your espresso. Easy to program grind amount, and shot times. It has a gauge to measure the pressure as it goes through the port a filter. It is a nice touch to be able to tell how things are working, several high price machine you have to feel it out and guess, this you can tell right away if something went wrong and you can adjust. The steam wand is easy to use, the switch on the side is okay, my super did have a better control knob that you could control the amount of steam that came out, but this one is slow enough that its not that bad to operate. Clean up is a snap, I really enjoy the fact that I can easily and quickly clean it up. It has a water filter, where I live we have a high concentration of hard water, so having a second filter to go through is nice. Parts. Breville has all the parts you can buy to fix your machine if they go out or need replaced. I am talking about new port a filters, rings, hoppers, water reservoirs, ect. It is pretty, looks really good, makes you want to drink coffee. The things that are not so nice: You will go through a lot of coffee. This is most true when you first get the machine and try to figure out how to run it. There is a couple of way things can go down. 1) you drink every cup you make, I suggest you do this alone. Anyone around you will worry you are on something because you will be running at a 1000 mph on that much caffeine, no matter what your tolerance is. You will be wondering why everyone around you is moving so slow. 2) invite people over and watch there reaction to find out well you are doing on making that espresso. Mess from the grounds. It has a tray, but for some reason my grounds always seem to go further then the tray. I placed a small dish under the grinder it that keeps it contained and its easily cleaned. You can also fill the port a filter, tamp, then fill a little more until you reach the proper level. I place a paper towel down and do the tamp on that, it catches the grounds that fall when tamping. Don't expect a piping hot cup of joe. You can get it hot enough, by following their suggestions. I poor hot water in my cup before and do a single shot on a empty port a filter, that seems to do a good enough job. My latte art is of clouds, mushrooms, cotton balls. I believe that is my malfunction though. Overall, for the price (especially now) and the quality of espresso I am getting, its the top choice. Is it the best machine out there, no. But if you can afford those then I am not sure why you are reading things on amazon. Try different beans, they will taste different from what you are used to, each type will need different techniques to get the right pull. The Seattle best coffee bean, I only need to lightly tamp, the Vietnamese Civet I have to really press hard to get to the right tamp. I will trying several others as I go along, but I think that's the best part of this machine. And to the few people ( there is other things I would call you) about the California restrictions, in the manual it does say that the parts on the machine that does come in contact with coffee or water is BPA Free and there is no parts that will make you grow a third limb, unless you already have one. If you read the blasted bill you might figure out what it actually is saying, Anything with a grinder or power cord falls in this warning. I don't know about you, but I am not grinding bits of plastic in my coffee, and I am not sucking on the power cord, but if that's what you want to do, go for it. For me, this has been a awesome buy, thank you for reading.
Top critical review
858 people found this helpful
Reliable God shots for about 2 years, now it's dying...
By Pierre Gourmet on Reviewed in the United States on August 15, 2015
Purchased November 2013. ORIGINAL REVIEW (September 2015): This machine has just enough functionality for me to consistently pull God shots as long as my beans are fresh and I choose the right grind. I have had this machine for nearly two years pulling 1-2 shots a day, and it has been quite reliable until now. I maintain and clean it regularly. However, recently it has started to vibrate loudly when I am pulling shots, and I think the pump may be failing. Many other people in online forums have complained of buzzing noises just before their unit failed. I am contacting Breville to see if they can help me identify and fix the problem. I paid over half a grand for this machine, so I'm hoping they can help! If you spend over $500 on an espresso machine, I imagine you want it to last at least 5 years if not 10. UPDATE # 1 (November 2015): Breville replaced my machine with a refurbished machine (Certified Remanufactured). UPDATE # 2 (December 2015): Replacement machine 1 started sharing the same problems as the original. Over the past few days it has also started to make rattling noises and sometimes it cannot generate sufficient pressure. As before, I have been decalcifying monthly and using the water filters, even pre-filtering the water before I put it in. I have also been cleaning the unit with the tablets whenever the Clean Me light turns on. UPDATE # 3: (January 2016): Received replacement machine 2 (certified remanufactured) from Breville. Machine makes loud rattling noises but works OK. UPDATE # 4 (March 2016): I have received two replacement machines under warranty after the original machine and the first replacement stopped working due to a manufacturing or design defect. The third machine (replacement machine 2) has now also stopped working. I have done the backflush cleaning with the tablets every time the Clean Me light comes on. I have decalcified (with vinegar) on a monthly basis without fail. I have pre-filtered the water with a high-end Stage 4 filter before putting it in the tank, and I have even used the carbon filter in the tank too. I am afraid I now must update my review to 1 star. Breville has great customer service, but this particular machine design is not one I would recommend if you plan on making espressos for more than a few months. You can find videos of my failing machines and the rattling noises on YouTube. Description of the symptoms: Sounds: - “Wao-wao wao-wao” whining sounds, especially during pre-infusion, and usually occurring the instant I touch the button - Uncharacteristic rattling, sometimes right when I press the button, and also sometimes during the “extraction” phase Sights: - No water exiting into cup, regardless of whether there are grounds or not in the portafilter, and regardless of how many times I press the button - Pressure shown as zero or very low on pressure gauge - Small amounts of steam squirting out of the steam wand when I’m making coffee - Water collection tray fills with water although no water comes out the portafilter, indicating that perhaps that the water may be leaking into the bottom of the machine. UPDATE # 5 (April 2016): I again contacted Breville, and they agreed to take the machine in for repair. They agreed to pay the shipping costs. Once again, bravo for the good customer service! UPDATE # 6 (May 2016): I received the repaired machine, but found immediately that the repair had been unsuccessful! Makes you wonder if they actually tried to fix it, or if they just did routine maintenance and sent it right back. I again contacted Breville, and they agreed to examine the machine a second time. UPDATE # 7 (June 2016): The machine was returned again, but the grinder was returned broken (or not reassembled properly). I can no longer change the grind size by turning the knob. No matter which grind size I select, I always get coarse grinds. I carried out a thorough cleaning of the grinder to be sure, to no effect. I contacted Breville, who refused to service or replace the unit due to the out of warranty status, but instead offered me a 35% discount off the purchase of a new machine under $1000. I insisted and posted several videos of the problem on YouTube. I even tried taking apart the grinder myself to fix it, but Breville wouldn't give me a parts list or assembly diagram, so I couldn't really figure it out on my own. UPDATE # 8 (July 2016): I kept insisting, and finally (miraculously), Breville agreed to send me a replacement (certified remanufactured) machine. Thank you, Breville, for accepting responsibility for the quality and workmanship of your products! I am now using Dezcal instead of vinegar for decalcifying. Otherwise, I will maintain this machine well (as before) and see how it goes. Wish me luck!

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