☕ Sip, Savor, and Go! Your espresso adventure awaits!
The Sobtoe Portable Espresso Machine is a cutting-edge, self-heating coffee maker designed for coffee lovers on the move. With a powerful 20-bar pressure system and a robust 7500mAh battery, it brews 3-5 cups of espresso in just minutes. Its compact, waterproof design makes it ideal for travel, camping, and office use, while the leak-proof insulation ensures safety and convenience. Compatible with both ground coffee and various coffee capsules, this espresso maker is the ultimate companion for any coffee enthusiast.
M**L
Espectacular para viajes
Calienta mu bien el agua, el resultado del café es inmejorable
M**
Very impressed
Had an issue at first but they sent me a new one. Works great qith the Nespresso pods, you just have to tighten hard. Battery life is good. Made three cups with regular coffee. This will.be great for a road trip.
R**N
Heats quick and is right temp
If you love coffee and want it ready to drink anywhere this is the unit to buy. With the capsule use and heating in just 3-4 mins its a great find. It makes about 4-5 warmed cups and the sizing is just right. It comes with a bag and charges with usb-c. Easy to use and directions are simple to understand.
T**T
Great idea, but broke after 2 uses.
This was a great option for camping. After two uses it failed to heat up. Very dissappointed.
T**K
Fail - Does not puncture Nespresso Pod foil top
Let me start with, I love this concept. I travel often and usually stay at places that do not have quality coffee machines in the room. So having a travel Nespresso maker seems ideal. When I first received the item, it arrived with about a 75% charge, but I went ahead and plugged it in to top it off. I did not pay attention to how long it took to charge. Once fully charged, I added water to the top compartment and timed the heating cycle - a little over 5 minutes. Not that bad for such a small device. The manual says 3-4 minutes, but that is not correct - I timed it 3 times, and it took a little over 5 minutes each time. I ran the hot water through the brew cycle and then checked the water temperature in the cup and it was 170 degrees. This seemed cool to me so I ran hot water through my Nespresso to see what I got at the cup and it was the exact same 170 degrees. I then re ran a heat cycle and before running the brew cycle, checked the temperature in the hot water compartment and it was exactly 200 degrees. So, it seems to get the brew temperature correct and loses the heat through the extraction and actual brewing. This is fairly common I think.After running through those tests I inserted a Nespresso Pod and ran the heating cycle again. Couple things to note. This thing comes with a basket for grinding your own beans and a basket for using a Nespresso pod. I only intended to use the Nespresso pod and have not tested the grind your own bean option.The Nespresso pod set looks well made - the tolerance around the capsule is tight (will make it hard to remove the capsule). The directions say to make sure you screw in the pod capsule tight. So I loaded the capsule, screwed it on tight, then tried to extract. After about 10 seconds of the extraction process, no liquid had come out, and the machine just beeped at me. I disassembled the machine, pulled out the capsule and saw the issue... the foil top on the capsule had not been pierced so water went in, but did not come out. I put a second capsule in the unit and ended up with the same results. This thing cannot pierce the foil top and is therefore useless.I believe the issue is a design flaw. Just like my Nespresso machine, there is a grid of small squares that, when using my Nespresso machine, puncture the foil so water can be forced through. This happens when I use the lever arm to lock the capsule in the machine. Here, the grid simply isn't tall enough to puncture the foil - so it never will. And trust me, I tried every way I could think of to get it to puncture the foil and it simple will not. So, the machine is useless to me. Perhaps it works with off brand capsules, but I do not buy off brand capsules (I went down that path a few years back and never found one I liked). So, huge disappointment. I couldn't test whether I believe this gets 20 bars of pressure (I doubt it, but it probably does get enough pressure to get real espresso)IF this worked, I would add a few other comments. You get exactly one shot, then have to wait five minutes to heat. I usually have two shots in the morning, so I would have to space them out. And, you would only get enough water for a shot of coffee. If you like an americano you would have to heat water separately. It also only does 4-5 shots when heating each one. So... What I really think this is for is the aeropress user who wants to upgrade to real espresso shots. Meaning, you heat your own water in a kettle, grind your own beans, then pull the espresso. Then you could add hot water on top and have a great americano with true espresso vs the imitation the aero press creates (albeit one that is delicious). Without heating the water, this thing probably has a 100 extractions in it before you would have to recharge.TLDR; seems well made, heats water exactly right, but fails because it has a design flaw and cannot puncture Nespresso pods. It is SO close to being awesome, but the design flaw ruins it for me.
Trustpilot
1 day ago
1 week ago