Welcome to our Espresso & Machines Website

I’m José Villalobos. I founded Espresso and Machines to do one thing: cut through the marketing noise and tell home baristas the truth about espresso equipment, based on real testing rather than press releases. This is the long version of who’s behind every review, comparison, and buying guide on this site — so you can decide whether to trust the recommendations.

The short version

Where it started

I was born and raised in Valparaíso, Chile — a port city where coffee, food, and family were never separate things. My obsession with coffee started in childhood, watching the rituals of long meals, espresso after lunch, and conversations that lasted longer than the cup did. By the time I was 16, I was traveling through South America to see where coffee actually came from. That trip never really ended.

Over the next four decades, I visited coffee farms across 18 countries in the Americas — Peru, Colombia, Brazil, Ecuador, Nicaragua, El Salvador, Panama, Mexico, Costa Rica, Honduras, Venezuela, Haiti, Guatemala, the Dominican Republic, Hawaii, California, Puerto Rico, and Cuba. Some I returned to many times. Some I only visited once. Each one left a different fingerprint on how I think about origin character, processing methods, and what makes a single-origin espresso shine versus disappear in milk.

Why machines

Tasting great coffee at origin makes you obsessed with reproducing it at home. That’s how the machine testing program started in 2018 — frustration with how hard it was to find honest, hands-on reviews of espresso equipment in any price tier. Most “reviews” online were either thinly-rewritten press releases or affiliate-driven listicles with no actual testing behind them. I started buying machines, testing them properly, and writing what I actually thought.

Eight years later, I’ve tested over 150 espresso machines — from $79 plastic pod brewers to $20,000 commercial-grade dual boilers. I’ve made every mistake worth making. I’ve ruined shots, broken parts, descaled the wrong way, paired bad grinders with great machines, and bought machines I regretted. The point of Espresso and Machines is to save you from making those mistakes by sharing what I learned along the way.

How I test machines

Every review on this site is based on a minimum 30 days of daily use with the actual machine on my counter. Not a 10-minute demo at a trade show. Not a single shot at a press event. Real, daily, lived-in testing. The protocol is consistent across machines so I can fairly compare them:

For the full methodology, see the testing methodology page.

What I won’t do

A few things I refuse, regardless of what it might cost the site:

Beyond espresso: the food side

Coffee doesn’t live in a vacuum. My palate was built around Italian and Latin American food traditions — long lunches, espresso to close them, asado cooked over wood fires, and the kind of meals that take all afternoon to prepare and ten minutes to disappear. I cook live-fire and BBQ in the South American asado tradition, which informs how I think about flavor, fat, smoke, and balance.

This site is focused on coffee and espresso machines, but the food background is part of why I think about the experience holistically — espresso isn’t just about extraction parameters. It’s about what comes before and after the cup. A great machine fits into a kitchen, into a meal, into a daily rhythm. The reviews try to reflect that.

What you can expect from this site

A note on independence

Espresso and Machines is funded primarily by affiliate commissions when readers purchase through links on the site. Some of the machines I rate highest pay the lowest commissions. Some machines I won’t recommend at all are the most profitable to link to. I’d rather lose the commission than send someone home with a $1,500 paperweight. For full details, see the affiliate disclosure.

Get in touch

Questions about a specific machine? Disagree with a review? Have an espresso problem you can’t solve? Reach me through the contact page. I read everything and respond to legitimate questions personally.

Thanks for reading. Pull a good shot.

— José Villalobos