Steam pressure / Preparation / Adjustments
Moka pot
The moka pot uses steam to push hot water from the lower chamber through the coffee and into the upper chamber. It produces an intense drink, but turns bitter if overheated.
Full basket, not tamped
Below the valve
3-5 minutes
Medium-fine
Extraction principle
How this method works
It is not espresso: it works with less pressure and different geometry. Its strength is concentration and domestic simplicity.
The main risk is extracting with water that is too hot for too long. Controlling heat and removing it in time greatly improves the cup.
Applicable gear
Buying guides for this method
If you need to choose gear, these catalog tools fit the recipe. Each link takes you directly to its buying recommendations.
Process
Step-by-step preparation
Use hot water
Fill the base with hot water up to below the valve to reduce time on heat.
Fill the basket
Add level coffee without tamping. Tamping increases blockage risk.
Assemble well
Screw carefully using a cloth if the base is hot.
Medium heat
Place on medium or low heat. Seek steady, not violent, flow.
Remove early
When the flow turns pale or starts bubbling, remove from heat.
Cool the base
You can run the base under cold water to stop extraction.
Tips
How to improve preparation
Do not compact
The moka pot is not designed for a tamped puck.
Avoid high heat
Overheating gives burnt and metallic notes.
Clean the gasket
A dirty or worn gasket affects pressure and flavor.
Dilute if needed
A little hot water makes moka gentler.
Diagnosis
Common mistakes
Tastes burnt
Use less heat, start with hot water and remove earlier.
Coffee does not rise
Check too-fine grind, gasket or valve.
Explosive flow
Heat too high or basket blocked.
Weak taste
Slightly finer grind or fresher coffee.
Compare methods
Back to the general guide
Use this recipe as a starting point. Then compare other methods to decide whether you want more body, more clarity, more intensity or easier daily brewing.