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I do like a Cafe Nero myself!
That's it! Pack your things and leave. Never darken my door again!

I do like a Cafe Nero myself!

I'm a total coffee geek (and snob). In the Before Time I went to independent coffee shops staffed by hipsters, and picked up a bag of Square Mile Red Brick to use at home (luckily they deliver, so I can still get my fix). I've got an ugly Iberital MC2 grinder that looks like a piece of lab equipment, a Knock hand grinder put together by some bloke in a workshop in Edinburgh, a Gaggia Classic (the old one with the proper switches and valve), an Aeropress, a Swiss Gold Filter, a Bialetti Brikka, and a Flair lever espresso gadget I've yet to get to grips with. This is getting worse than camera gear!
When I'm slumming it, Nero, Starbucks and Costa are barely drinkable as espresso. There I'd add sugar, which I never do otherwise, or just get a flat white or something. Nespresso tastes better to me than the stuff from these big chains or the average restaurant, but the coffee you can get from a really good independent shop, or make at home from good freshly roasted beans if you can take the time to get the grind just right, is in a different league altogether. Supermarket coffee beans are mostly bad, but I've noticed Sainsbury's have decent Union and Modern Standard beans with roasting dates (Waitrose also do Union).
Love coffee is one thing, coffee snob I am not...but back to the OP...but I would not get a Pod machine because simply of the amount of waste produced.
You produce more waste buying bagged beans or ground than my nespresso machine makes!
The pods are aluminium and recycled.. that’s the only waste it produces.
Bean bags tend to be foil, or paper, but often have a plastic vent valve which is a waste stream that can’t be easily recycled.
The Gaggia or the MC2? Both look built to last! They really mucked about with the Gaggia Classic about 5 years ago, which was about as popular as New Coke, but it looks like they've returned to something close to the original in the new 'Pro' version. Not the original price, though. They want about £400 for it now...I have the same machine, 14years old now!
The Gaggia or the MC2? Both look built to last! They really mucked about with the Gaggia Classic about 5 years ago, which was about as popular as New Coke, but it looks like they've returned to something close to the original in the new 'Pro' version. Not the original price, though. They want about £400 for it now...
What about carbon footprint in transporting all that metal? Are you 100% recycling the pods in the designated places in the limited drop off points around the country and never put one in the bin ever ? Are we going to go down this rabbit hole?
What about the carbon footprint of transporting coffee beans from South America to where ever they get ground up and packaged into your little parcels, and the foil or paper used to package them.. All the pods go into the supplied green recycling bag and are collected by the courier when he delivers new pods.
The fact is, nespresso pods are no more wasteful than coffee beans or ground coffee, yet people seem to think because you use them once it’s a environmental disaster.
So we are going down this rabbit hole?
Here is a fact, coffee beans are not ground up and packaged into little parcels from South America, they are sent in 20kg sacks bagged in natural fabric, often via boat when its green beans which can be kept for ages, and when you order them, the roasters roast them in the UK then package them up.
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The pods, depends where you buy them from, regardless, that pod will need transporting, weight including package vs the same amount of coffee, there is no chance for the same amount of coffee pods are going to weigh less considering these pods are package individually vs 20kg fabric sacks. Plus the pods have the paper boxes on top needed. You are basically paying for 2 layers of packaging here.
This is before the limited choices, you are always at the mercy of the flavours they make, as opposed to buying beans direct, what if I choose to buy green beans, there is no reason I cannot, and roast them myself at home on nothing more than a pan.
However you spin it, coffee has to get from South American or Africa or South East Asia to the UK + packaging. Then you are looking at which packaging has a larger carbon footprint, is it paper + a tiny plastic valve or aluminum? Let's not forget paper can be recycle and you can even get biodegradable plastic now also if not recycled plastic.
I was speaking to a local farmer last year who grows strawberries, he was talkling about moving away from plastic containers (those black thin plastic ones) into some paper base containers as paper is recycled as it is better for the image in a PR perspective. However the volume of containers he buys on a lorry from 1 delivery when it is plastic FAR exceeds the paper version, meaning the carbon footprint in getting the paper container to his farm pretty much wipe out any benefits. Also he used to use recycled plastic, they were the black plastic. The public sees recycled paper and thinks it must be better, it isn't necessarily always.
And let's not forget these pod company like to do everything they can for you to keep buying their product, the convenience is one thing, trying to sell you the recycled pod is just another angle. They might recycle them but energy is required to recycle, from transport to heat to labour to machining to tooling to milling. It's an enormously lengthly process that uses a lot of energy, time and money.
If I want to, I can go to any local roaster and buy freshly roasted beans and ask them to put it direct into a jar I bought with me. The beans would not have seen a single plastic bag between the coffee plant to my cup. However, there is no way around your aluminum pods and how you dispose of it, plus when it it out of your hands, you don't even know if they are recycling it.
There is much more to it than a recycling scheme for pods, don't let that fool you.
Im well aware how RAVE coffee get and package their beans
I’m taking about pre packaged ground like lavazza and others in the foil blocks. These go though all the same processes as pods, and create the same waste.
It was pretty recent that RAVE switched to paper bags, they used non recyclable foil lined plastic ones for a long time. In fact I was given a box full of the last of the plastic signature blend when they were switching.
Let’s not get started on the air miles of the staff at Rave and other small batch coffee roasters flying all over the place on taster and business trips.
Won't you need 2?Anyhoo.
Just had one of THESE which although rather expensive, has resolved my storage problem nicely.
Have also found that a local charity shop takes in used pods for recycling.
@Raymond Lin @TCR4x4 *waves hand* [Jedi]This is not the thread you're looking for[\Jedi]

An 2017 article on Nespresso pods.
Home - Mark Allen
Mark Allen is a trusted, family-owned media company which specialises in professional content and services for global audiences. Content is key to everything we do, across print, digital and events. That's why our organisation prides itself on solving problems for its clients, fueling passions...www.recyclingwasteworld.co.uk
I won't cherry pick numbers of headlines from it but let you read it yourself. Let's just say you don't get 100% of the pod back when you recycle it. It's much lower than that, it also creates wastes as it recycles as there is a plastic element to it too.
@Raymond Lin @TCR4x4 *waves hand* [Jedi]This is not the thread you're looking for[\Jedi]
Anyhoo.
Just had one of THESE which although rather expensive, has resolved my storage problem nicely.
Have also found that a local charity shop takes in used pods for recycling.
We've got one of those carousels - well, an older version that doesn't release the bigger (chai latté) pods through the lower slots, so we have to slide them out through the top - SUCH a waste of energy!!!![]()
Mrs Nod gets through 3 Americanos every day and I have the same number of lattés. Tea top ups as necessary for me and a chai each in the afternoon.
Our closest recycling point for them is about 20 miles along the coast so we wait until we have a couple of bin bags full then take them along on the way to somewhere nice for lunch. In normal times! Need to go to Lyme Regis soon, the garage is getting full!
Won't you need 2?![]()
Just filled it up, we now have 8 mochas and 6 gingerbread lattes in the cupboard.

You don’t have to open all the packets at the same time, we store some on top of the kitchen units and in the shed if we are really overloaded
We have a storage drawer that fits under the coffee machines that hardly takes up any usable space.
Buy some magnets, slide them down the side of the box, and stick the boxes to the fridge door?We're very short on storage in our kitchen, just about managed to fit the 4 excess boxes in a cupboard.
Buy some magnets, slide them down the side of the box, and stick the boxes to the fridge door?
Thinking of getting one of these. Is one much the same as the other or some better than others. They seem to be mostly around the same sort of price so hard to choose.
Been looking at mainly the Tassimo and Nespresso machines but open to recommendations of any others.
Thanks
I would suggest that you check the supermarkets first, see what range of coffee and/or tea is available, then decide which machine you want to go for based on what's available.
I buy chocolate pods for my granddaughter, she loves them and she loves the ease & speed with which I can rustle up a mug of hot chocolate for her.Do people really but hot chocolate pods for a coffee machine? I'm amazed that's a thing, Good marketing for sure.