Singlespeed & Fixed Gear - For the hipster who has everything...

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nightfly
06-01-11, 06:27 AM
The Chris King Espresso Tamper:

http://chrisking.com/store/tampers


Scrodzilla
06-01-11, 06:31 AM
I just bought all for colors.

chenghiz
06-01-11, 09:08 AM
My LBS got one of these in a few weeks ago, it's very, um, shiny?


Scaught
06-01-11, 09:08 AM
I love how it lists the grams.

yummygooey
06-01-11, 09:10 AM
Dumb.

TejanoTrackie
06-01-11, 09:13 AM
I'm 5'-3" and my inseam in 28" Which size should I get?

jessesv
06-01-11, 09:52 AM
I'm 5'-3" and my inseam in 28" Which size should I get?

:lol: x1000

striknein
06-01-11, 10:13 AM
I don't think they have a "Juniors" section. =]

carleton
06-01-11, 10:19 AM
i'm 5'-3" and my inseam in 28" which size should i get?

hahaha!

tashi
06-01-11, 11:17 AM
I would have bought one for making espresso.


I just bought all for colors.

redpear
06-01-11, 12:07 PM
I admit, this seems a little dumb; however, I know it's part of barista culture to have 'your' tamper that really expresses you. It's really one of the few tools of the art that allows personal expression.

So, if you're a cyclist and use Chris King headsets, this would make sense, I guess.

HardyWeinberg
06-01-11, 12:20 PM
A nice match to the Campagnolo corkscrew (and cheaper too)

motobeCarnage
06-01-11, 12:22 PM
ehh none of the colors are really my style..

powdercoat or paint it myself?

Xgecko
06-01-11, 12:41 PM
300 dollars would be better spent on decent Espresso machine

AngelGendy
06-01-11, 12:53 PM
How many grams is the Campy corkscrew? Does it come in other colors too?

jdgesus
06-01-11, 12:55 PM
u laff, but i would totally buy one, but i wouldn't want to use it daily as a barista, as the top doesn't look comfy on the hand

carleton
06-01-11, 03:08 PM
300 dollars would be better spent on decent Espresso machine

Or 300 $1 cups of coffee.

http://images.wikia.com/en.futurama/images/6/6d/300_dollar_bill.jpg

AngelGendy
06-01-11, 04:08 PM
Or 300 $1 cups of coffee.



No self-respecting hipster would pay less that $8 per cup....

wearyourtruth
06-01-11, 05:00 PM
should also compliment my park tools pizza cutter and TP dispenser

http://www.viaciclante.com/products/photos/big/park%20tools%20pizza%20cutter.jpg

http://digd.ug/wp-content/uploads/2007/12/parktool.jpg

AngelGendy
06-01-11, 05:02 PM
Is that a 1" or 1 1/8" fork?

Paul01
06-01-11, 05:35 PM
Do those sizes fit a standard saddle?

Leukybear
06-01-11, 05:41 PM
Old news but then again, it looks like you can modify one into a car shifter knob....

Xgecko
06-01-11, 06:34 PM
Or 300 $1 cups of coffee.

http://images.wikia.com/en.futurama/images/6/6d/300_dollar_bill.jpg


No self-respecting hipster would pay less that $8 per cup....

you can more than pay for the $300 machine by making your own $8 cups of coffee

Build your own
06-01-11, 07:43 PM
Hubs,Headsets,Barrista s**t....F**k King.

hairnet
06-01-11, 07:54 PM
http://digd.ug/wp-content/uploads/2007/12/parktool.jpg

This is the SSFG forum, I don't feel secure with quick release.

carleton
06-01-11, 07:55 PM
you can more than pay for the $300 machine by making your own $8 cups of coffee

I used to be a barista, so I'm familiar with the process (as I'm sure you guys are, too).

For me, the benefits of at-home brewing stop at freshly ground beans and French pressed coffee. This includes prep, grinding, brewing, and cleanup. Anything that takes more effort than that isn't worth it to me. That includes expresso. And *definitely* includes any drink with foam. Not worth it to do it at home.

My buddy bought an expresso machine thinking that he'd save his $3/day....he used it maybe 10 times -- tops.

carleton
06-01-11, 07:58 PM
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41LxqgqMwZL._SL500_AA300_.jpg

http://www.amazon.com/Il-Cavatappi-Campagnolo-Wine-Opener/dp/B000VNTNAO

MSRP is $200, I think.

hamish5178
06-01-11, 08:35 PM
I used to be a barista, so I'm familiar with the process (as I'm sure you guys are, too).

For me, the benefits of at-home brewing stop at freshly ground beans and French pressed coffee. This includes prep, grinding, brewing, and cleanup. Anything that takes more effort than that isn't worth it to me. That includes expresso. And *definitely* includes any drink with foam. Not worth it to do it at home.

My buddy bought an expresso machine thinking that he'd save his $3/day....he used it maybe 10 times -- tops.

riiiight

eboslar
06-01-11, 09:04 PM
Im sad this was made where i live. Though working in a coffee shop, the people i see day in day out for their 6 lattes. This matches nicely

dookie
06-01-11, 09:11 PM
riiiight

ha ha ha! and not everyone approaches their home coffee gear the same way that the friend does either:

i spent about the same on my home coffee gear as i did my fixed gear, and it is money i do not regret for a moment. 58mm ceramic burr grinder, single boiler e61 w/homebrew (fuji!) pid, counter culture as a local roaster, and my at-home 'expresso' is exemplary...thanks. gonna get me one of them king tampers for sure (coffee brown, duh).

doing some rough math here (for the first time), it would appear that i am *well* under $3/day. granted, i use the machine a lot (almost every day, sometimes for 2-3 drinks) and have owned it for some time, so the numbers are a bit dilute (expresso, not so much).

equipment
~$1.5k (w/maint) / 7yrs = $214/yr
50wk * ~10drinks = 500dr/yr
$214 / 500 = $0.43 / drink

coffee
3lb/mo @ $15 = $450/yr
$450 / 500 = $0.90 / drink

plus electricity, of course...for which you will have to do the math: 1200W boiler, running ~1000hrs/yr. call it $1.50 total?

worth it, worth it, worth it...provided you make good use of it.

carleton
06-01-11, 09:36 PM
riiiight

Haha. Dude, I didn't have to spell when I made coffee.

Espresso. Soooorrrrryy :)

Relyks
06-01-11, 09:40 PM
Whoa! Chris King headsets for only 75!? I just bought one for my bike! This is awesome!

macnab
06-01-11, 09:41 PM
I prefer the stainless 204370Moka pot for home (and camping) use.

carleton
06-01-11, 09:43 PM
I prefer the stainless 204370Moka pot for home (and camping) use.

How does it work? Easy to clean?

Higher Class
06-01-11, 09:51 PM
I prefer the stainless 204370Moka pot for home (and camping) use.
Are these just percolators? I hate the taste. Gets the job done, though.

vladuz976
06-02-11, 12:03 AM
the salt&pepper shakers are much cooler.
http://chrisking.com/store/shakers

Leukybear
06-02-11, 12:31 AM
I have a feeling whoever works at chris king has a bunch of times in their hands.... I would rather they be more productive and create something that's not random.

frantik
06-02-11, 01:45 AM
wtf they sell the coffee for it too http://chrisking.com/store/coffee_water

Retem
06-02-11, 01:49 AM
chris king tamper check!
la pavoni press check!
chris king roast!
all good to go

frantik
06-02-11, 01:50 AM
they should make a pedal-operated coffee grinder

jdgesus
06-02-11, 10:30 AM
they should make a pedal-operated coffee grinder

or, pedal operated manual espresso press!

just dank
06-02-11, 10:38 AM
or, pedal operated manual espresso press!

win!

macnab
06-02-11, 01:03 PM
How does it work? Easy to clean?

Yes easy to clean. Three metal pieces, just rinse between using (and wipe with p-towel when coffee buildup exceeds your threshold)


Are these just percolators? I hate the taste. Gets the job done, though.

Not percolators, the moka pots are stovetop espresso makers. Boiling water is forced upwards through the ground coffee under pressure and the brew ends up in the top compartment. The brew is much thicker than percolated coffee, but not quite as thick as real-deal espresso, as the pressure is lower and the grind of coffee is coarser. Super simple and very flavorful and potent.

https://filledelaville.files.wordpress.com/2009/12/moka-pot-diagram.jpg?w=200&h=222
This blog goes through the process pretty well:

The Moka Pot (with photos) (https://velvetliquid.wordpress.com/2008/02/20/the-moka-pot/)

carleton
06-02-11, 01:21 PM
Oh! I've seen those little Moka pots and yeah, the flavor comes out nicely with them.

I never knew what they were called.

Xgecko
06-02-11, 04:30 PM
moka pots are stovetop espresso makers. Boiling water is forced upwards through the ground coffee under pressure and the brew ends up in the top compartment. The brew is much thicker than percolated coffee, but not quite as thick as real-deal espresso, as the pressure is lower and the grind of coffee is coarser. Super simple and very flavorful and potent.

https://filledelaville.files.wordpress.com/2009/12/moka-pot-diagram.jpg?w=200&h=222
This blog goes through the process pretty well:

The Moka Pot (with photos) (https://velvetliquid.wordpress.com/2008/02/20/the-moka-pot/)

I usually use espresso coffee in my moka pot, which IMO makes a brew nearly as good as my father's Pavoni. The way I look at it the pot makes the most cost effective esspresso

nuhtowel
06-02-11, 05:29 PM
You can get salt and pepper shakers too, I wonder if anyone has bought them and used them as hubs.

redpear
06-02-11, 05:47 PM
Nice, but no real crema.

hamish5178
06-02-11, 09:34 PM
Moka coffee isn't really the same as espresso. As mentioned there's not really any crema. It's more of a very-dark coffee somewhere between espresso and french-press.

I have a Nespresso. Which is actually pretty damn good (and convenient, the last two years I lived in a dorm. closest sink was down the hall). My brother-in-law uses what I think is a Cimballi Domus, which makes great coffee but is inconsistent. Even thought the Nespresso never reaches greatness, it is always pretty good and never gross.

edit: http://en.last-video.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/nespresso-jeorge-clooney.jpg

redpear
06-02-11, 09:48 PM
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/21nR1siQGdL._SL500_AA300_.jpg

Not espresso, not moka, not french pressed.

jdgesus
06-02-11, 11:56 PM
aeropresses©®™ actually taste pretty good