This all-in-one pulls genuinely good espresso at an entry-level price, but the built-in grinder is the bottleneck: steps too coarse to fine-tune, retention bouncing unpredictably shot-to-shot, and light roasts either choke the basket or gush through with no middle ground. The 3-way solenoid fails often enough that drip tray floods and weak steam become expected maintenance, not surprises. Beginners pulling medium-roast milk drinks will love the convenience at $400-500, especially if consistency matters less than speed. If you'll obsess over dialing in or want to explore light roasts, pair a Bambino with a standalone grinder instead, same budget, far less frustration, and a real upgrade path when the rabbit hole pulls you deeper.
The Cremina is Swiss mechanical espresso in its purest form: no electronics, no automation, just a lever, a boiler, and your own hands learning to coax pressure and timing into something excellent. At $4,305, it costs triple what a La Pavoni lever machine does, and one owner sold theirs after six months because impatient housemates couldn't tolerate pulling every shot manually. When your technique clicks, the espresso is superb, and vintage models from the '60s still command $3,000 after restoration, a testament to durability that outlives most kitchens. Buy this if the ritual itself is the reward and you're the household's sole barista; skip it if anyone else needs quick morning coffee or you want convenience over craft.