This superauto delivers café variety at home without the café footprint anxiety, genuinely intuitive controls, and oat milk that froths instead of separates. The cold brew mode sounds like a coup but underwhelms in practice (pull shots over ice instead), and you'll waste a pound of beans dialing in your grind before the espresso hits its stride. The grinder dial jams if you adjust it mid-grind, which is a design flaw you'll learn to work around. For someone who wants fifty drink recipes, easy daily cleaning, and quality espresso once the setup phase is over, this is a strong buy. If you need plug-and-play simplicity or genuinely good cold brew, keep looking.
La Marzocco packed commercial-grade dual boilers and a rotary pump into a footprint that fits tight counters, delivering temperature stability and shot forgiveness that leave E61 machines behind. The stock portafilter is the glaring weak point: the plastic bottom feels cheap, the thicker neck shakes loose in grinder forks mid-dose, and the non-standard lug design forces you into specific gaskets or a $200 aftermarket handle to fix what should have been right out of the box. If you need the smallest serious dual-boiler available and don't mind the portafilter swap, this is the machine; if you have space for the full-size Mini, take that instead.