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De'Longhi Stilosa Manual Espresso Machine, Latte & Cappuccino Maker, 15 Bar Pump Pressure + Milk Frother Steam Wand, Black / Stainless, EC260BK, 13.5 x 8.07 x 11.22 inches

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Availability: In Stock.
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Arrives Wednesday, May 22
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Style: Machine


Features

  • Note: 1)Too coarse a grind, too little coffee, or insufficiently tamping the grounds before brewing can all lead to inadequate pressure for a proper brew. 2)It is important to note that the amount of espresso extracted will vary depending on the grind size and amount and reprogramming may be needed when the size and amount are adjusted
  • Brew lattes, cappuccinos and espressos in a comfort of your home.
  • Contemporary and Compact Design: The perfect addition to your modern kitchen countertop, without taking up too much space, plus its easy to clean.
  • 15 BAR Pump: The optimal pressure to extract a single or double espresso, so your coffee drink comes out perfectly rich.
  • Manual Milk Frother: Texture your milk with ease to create an authentic cappuccino, latte or flat white.
  • Stainless Steel Boiler: Robust design, durable construction of this boiler is engineered to last longer and work for years with consistent performance.
  • Includes port a filter and 2 filters: An ergonomically designed port a filter has 2 filters, for single or double espresso.
  • 2 level cup holder: Allows you to use a variety of cup sizes so you can have as muchor as littleespresso as youd like.
  • Included components: Accessories Included: Portafilter, Measuring Scoop/Tamper, single & double pod filter

Description

Now you can incorporate delicious espresso drinks into your daily routine. Introducing Stilosa by De’Longhi. Created for those embarking on their espresso journey, this elegantly designed machine allows you to easily craft authentic espressos, lattes and cappuccinos in the comfort of your own home. The 15 bar pump creates the optimal pressure to extract a single or double espresso according to espresso brewing standards. An ergonomically designed portafilter has two filters, for single or double espresso. A separate tamper provides an additional control of even and consistent pressure for a better extraction. The two level cup holder accommodates taller cups. The heart of Stilosa – the durable Stainless steel boiler is engineered to last long and work for years with consistent performance, unlike the competition. The manual milk frother mixes steam and milk to create a rich, creamy froth for evenly textured lattes and cappuccinos just the way you like them. Stilosa’s sleek, refined design and stainless steel elements make this the perfect addition to your kitchen countertop, without taking up too much space. On top of that it’s simple to clean and maintain, to ensure your espresso machine lasts longer. Your at-home espresso journey starts now with Stilosa.What's included: Espresso Machine Portafilter Tamper Filter for Single & Double Espresso Measuring Spoon Instruction Manual & Quick Start Guide 1 Year Warranty.


Brand: De'Longhi


Capacity: 1200 Milliliters


Color: Black and Stainless


Product Dimensions: 8.07"D x 13.5"W x 11.22"H


Special Feature: Milk Frother


Coffee Maker Type: Espresso Machine


Material: Stainless Steel, Plastic


Filter Type: Reusable


Style: Machine


Specific Uses For Product: Espresso Machine


Item Weight: 9.48 Pounds


Included Components: 33.8 fl.oz water tank, De’Longhi Stilosa Espresso Machine, Accessories Included Portafilter, Measuring Scoop/Tamper, single & double pod filter


Wattage: 1100 watts


Voltage: 120.00


Model Name: Stilosa


Number of Items: 1


Unit Count: 1.0 Count


Product Dimensions: 8.07 x 13.5 x 11.22 inches


Item Weight: 9.48 pounds


Manufacturer: De'Longhi


Country of Origin: China


Item model number: EC260BK


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: No


Date First Available: July 2, 2020


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Wednesday, May 22

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • I have the answers to your questions. ~Now updated~ see bottom.
Style: Machine
* I only rate exceptional products 5 stars. * This espresso machine meets my exceptional standard. * Price/function ratio is unbeatable. * Good for everyone except those brewing commercial amounts of coffee. Due to the length of this review and the sake of brevity, I will label each section for easy reference. SUMMARY Will this machine brew a cafe quality coffee drink right out of the box? Yes, but with major caveats. WHY I BOUGHT THIS MACHINE Money. Plain and simple. I wanted an espresso machine that wasn’t $500+. I just don’t have the money. I set out to buy what I thought was the very cheapest functional espresso machine to find out if it would in fact produce an espresso that was worth it. The Stilosa is it. You can’t go cheaper, once you do that, the machines offered don’t work at all, I mean, at all. They don’t have consistent pressures, temperatures and flow rates. So please, don’t waste your money on the $59.00 versions. At the time of posting, I bought the Stilosa at $99.00 on sale. INTRODUCTION When I purchased this, I knew nothing about espresso. I just wanted a good coffee drink without spending, what is now, $7.00 a cup. Since then, I have learned everything about espresso and have almost a 100 hours of study and practice in. Through lots of trial and error, I have taught myself the intricacies of espresso brewing, and believe me, it is far more intricate than you think! I also found out that many of the terms are vague and far from universal. With that said, most of what I will write aligns with as much of a community standard as one exists. CAVEAT #1 The truth is simple. This machine will brew a cafe quality drink right out of the box because “most” cafes have horrible drinks. I have discovered that brewing espresso is a fine balance between science and art. The major chains actually have very expensive machines and they still brew disgusting coffee. I have read so many reviews, and the one thing that is consistent throughout all of them is this; purists (the French and Italians), and anyone who has had a good espresso, won’t even go to the major chains. This is why. Lemon juice is disgusting! But pair it with sugar and you have probably one of the most popular drinks on the planet, lemonade. Likewise, most of us hate extra dark chocolate, because it is really bitter, but blend it with milk, and surprise, you have one of the most popular deserts, milk chocolate! Sugar balances sour, and dairy balances bitterness. What this means is this. You could run sand through the Stilosa, and if you blend it with enough sugar and milk, it is difficult to differentiate between it and major chain’s coffees. It isn’t until you start drinking espresso straight that you notice how horrific most of it is. To test this, just go in and ask for a double shot, chances are it will be bitter or sour. If you don’t know, espresso is actually very balanced and often velvety and sweet on its own. So, will the Stilosa brew a really good espresso right out of the box with no other tools? No, but…… neither will a $5,000.00 machine. Which leads me to caveat #2. CAVEAT #2 It doesn’t matter what machine you buy, none of them will take bad coffee and make it good. Again, I wanted to buy a machine as cheap as possible, with no accessories, and see if I could get a good espresso. Sorry, if you are on a budget, it’s not gonna happen. No matter what your budget is, you have to have a grinder. As soon as you are forced into buying pre-ground coffee roasted 10 weeks ago, you will only get what those products are able to deliver, regardless of the price of your espresso machine. My suspicion is, this is why major brands have such bad coffee. In the pursuit of supply chain uniformity, they lose freshness. Crema is a function of the release of CO2, once ground, these gases are escaping. It is simple science. Even with the best vacuum packaging, pre-ground coffee will lose its ability to create crema in a couple days (if not less). Combine that with stale beans and there is nothing you can do to make good coffee. Imagine trying to make a great sandwich with expired stale bread and cheese. Ingredients matter. You have to have a grinder. I didn’t want one, but I was forced to buy one, otherwise my espresso machine was just going to sit there, unused. This is of course if you don’t want to dump a bunch of sugar and milk in. I spent $50 on an Enzoo conical burr grinder, and it works great. You may say, “what about just grinding your beans at the grocery store?”. tried that, several times, it doesn’t work. First of all, those machines are all out of spec because nobody every maintains them. Second, every coffee is different and “dial in” needs to happen for each brand and roast of coffee. Third, you will buy a 8 or 10 oz bag of coffee and grind it all at once but you’ll never use it all at once. The next morning, your coffee is already starting to go stale. The good news is this. If you have a $1000.00 espresso machine, you still need a grinder. So at least you can buy the Stilosa and have an overall lower financial commitment. CAVEAT #3 It is impossible to get a fantastic espresso without adding some tools to the Stilosa. This is not so bad considering the price point of the Stilosa, because, once again, you will have to buy all that anyway regardless of the machine you purchase. This is only the case if you buy an espresso machine and not a bean to cup machine of course. If you don’t want to mask your espresso with sugar and milk, you will need the following things without exception; Grinder = $50-$75 Kitchen Scale = $15-$35 Not necessary but very helpful and time saving; WDT = $10-$30 Dosing Funnel = $10-$35 Tamping Tool = $10-$65 Espresso shot glasses Varies Puck Polishers Blah blah Non-pressure Portafilter $$$$ pricey And the list goes on. This is where espresso making turns into more of a hobby than just wanting a good cup. The accessories that come with the Stilosa will work, they don’t work great, but they will work. What you trade in money, you lose in time. You can still get a really good cup of coffee (this is only if you have a grinder and a scale) from the Stilosa with its accessories, but you will work for it. The last 5% of quality is always the hardest, and that’s where the upgrades come. If you want, budget a few things. Namely a bottomless, naked, Portafilter, with a non-pressurized filter basket. The Stilosa comes with a Portafilter and 2 pressurized filter baskets (7 gram + 14 gram). ~ Side Note Below ~ ~ The Stilosa has a very unique and interesting pressurized filter basket. More often, to maintain pressure, a pressurized filter basket will only have one hole in the bottom. The Stilosa actually has a spring driven piston that really works very well. This is an industry upgrade and I think more and more economy machines will come with this feature. You can also “hack” the filter basket if you wanted. You can remove the spring piston assembly, place the screen back in the basket, and have a non-pressurized basket. I would NOT recommend this as it probably voids your warranty. ~ CAVEAT #4 The price to function ratio of the Stilosa is incredible. But that is a ratio. More expensive machines give you things that this just won’t. You will not be able to watch or change; temperature profiles or pressure profiles, and it doesn't have a PID (proportional–integral–derivative controller), and frankly a bunch of other things you probably have never heard of. But the Stilosa has fantastic features for the price point. It has a very flat and consistent pressure profile, its group head is heated, as is the top of the machine (for heating your cup), and the steaming wand is amazing. It is also a nice size and fits very well on my counter without being overbearing. Unless you are making 100+ cups a day, you really don’t need all that other stuff. Of course, those things are nice if you have found yourself turning espresso into a hobby, but as we all know, hobbies get kind of expensive. My only substantial complaint about the Stilosa is this, there is no way to grab and hold it as you install and remove the Portafilter. I am strong enough that this isn’t a problem, but for others out there, this may be a bit of a challenge. SUMMARY Five stars all day long. This is the single best entry machine you can buy. It is backed by a major espresso machine manufacturer and they hit the mark. It will consistently produce a “better than cafe” espresso, it will just make you work for it. Paired with a good grinder, you will be able to play with all your ratios and pull Ristrettos, Espressos, and Lungos without issue. It heats fast (a little over a minute on cold mornings), has a really nice upgraded spring piston pressurized filter basket. Consistently makes “better than cafe” micro foam for latte art (with practice). You can easily upgrade the Portafilter to a bottomless one without issue. No automatic timing, which is what you want for proper pulls (time is a measure, not a variable). It is advertised that it has an auto shut off……. I haven’t see that yet. I just turn mine off after use. I also fill it with filtered, bottled water, it’s so much easier than removing the tank and filling it. Considering I have less than $200.00 in the whole setup, I couldn’t be happier. With good coffee, a good dial in, and lots of practice, you will be able to make a really good cup of coffee, better than the major chains. I would buy again in a heartbeat. THE “CATCH” This will take you to a whole new level, but you are going to earn it. Lots of frustrating moments, but ultimately very rewarding. If you just want a fast cup of coffee, don’t buy this. Go buy a pod machine like Nespresso, LOR, or Lavazza. Remember, these aren’t espresso machines, and just because they call it that, doesn’t make it true. But with that said, their coffees are moderately good. For about the same total investment, you can get milk “frothers” and a pod machine that will make your drink in 20 seconds. Dump enough sugar and milk in and you won’t know the difference. But they will never dial into the perfect, pure, crema topped, 1-2 ratio, pressure pulled, espresso. And once you have had that, you’ll never go back. Some helpful info: 51mm 2 ear Portafilter with a 7 gram and 14 gram filter basket. ~ most machines are 54mm or 58mm with 18 gram baskets. As a small side note, 7 grams was the original Italian single espresso, and can be very difficult to brew correctly. But less coffee means you can have more of it throughout the day! Steaming wand with Pannello attachment. Heated top for cup warming. Heated grouphead. 33+ oz water tank. ~ Update I stand by everything I have said. However, I decided to upgrade to a bottomless naked portafilter and that has changed everything. The dial in on a new coffee is so much easier and the crema and flavor of the coffee is so much easier to manipulate! The other big thing I have discovered is the perfect coffee. Do yourself a favor and go get Tony’s Upland blend. Brew it to a 2.7 ratio at roughly 27 seconds. Oh…. My….. Gosh…..! You’re welcome. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on February 3, 2023 by Benjamin Burlinson Benjamin Burlinson

  • For what it costs, not bad! Decent travel / RV machine
Style: Machine
No, its NOT the equal of the $2k+ Vetrano sitting on my kitchen counter, plumbed in and always-on. Not even close. You're paying well under 10% of that money, so keep that in mind. The filters are non-standard (smaller) sized, so your big tamper won't work, and they're pressurized, so the grind matters less but the best of extraction isn't going to happen either. And its a thermoblock with little thermal mass. That's the bad side. Now the good side -- it makes legitimate espresso. I ground up a double shot in my Macap M4, filled the reservoir, tamped, waited for the "ready" light to come on and.... water was too cold; the shot was sour. Tried again, this time preheating on the "steam" sitting. Voila. NOT BAD AT ALL. A *bit* bitter (overdone; water too hot) but not by much. Very drinkable. You still need a decent burr grinder, not a "whirly blade" and good, properly-roasted coffee. There's no getting around that. I don't do frothed milk drinks so I have no idea how the steamer works in that regard. I would not expect much there; if that's your gig this is probably not the right machine although technically it appears to be able to do the job. You need dry steam in volume for that to produce credible lattes and cappa and I very much doubt this thing can produce said steam in the required amount to get anywhere near what my big machine on the counter can do. Would I ever contemplate replacing my big and expensive machine with this? No. But I bought it as something I can throw in the car for a trip, or in the RV for a nice vacation, bring roasted coffee in a snap-lock container with my grinder and have my morning espressos. For THAT it does and will absolutely fill the bill -- at a reasonable price and without taking up more space than the ordinary coffee pot, which makes bog-standard ordinary swill. Since I prefer espresso the option to have it at a reasonable cost it definitely beats not -- or paying $5 for one pulled by a barista that likely doesn't know what he or she is doing or worse, is using an "automated" machine that produces garbage (e.g. Starbucks) It doesn't take many of those "cafe" coffees that are garbage to pay for this one when traveling, and you can get very-serviceable shots out of it rather than drink bilge water from the Green Monster, so there you have it. As long as you understand what you're buying and don't expect it to produce true cafe-quality shots when said machine is operated by someone with a reasonable amount of skill you won't be disappointed. Recommended. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on February 8, 2023 by Tickerguy

  • Good expresso, especially for the price
Style: Machine
This machines makes good, decent expresso for what it is. This is a budget machine and anyone expecting cafe level expresso all the time is expecting too much. With that said, here is what you need to make good expresso most of the time: 1. Buy a non pressurized 51mm basket that holds at least 15g of coffee. The included pressurized basket is junk. To use a proper sized non pressurized basket you need to remove the black plastic distribution tray on the bottom of the portafilter. Just unscrew it with a screwdriver from the bottom. 2. Buy a better tamper. The plastic one is junk 3. Get a filter basket screen. Trust me. This will help distribute the water evenly and create better more consistent shots. 4. Use a good grinder. I wasted a lot of coffee and water before doing this. Other optional items to use: 1. Buy a WDT tool - helps with clumping 2. Use a paper filter at the bottom of the filter basket. Odd but it does help somewhat. Good luck and be careful that you don’t go down the espresso rabbit hole trying to make good espresso! ;) ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on February 15, 2023 by uubrgeek

  • Buena calidad.
Style: Machine
Compre esta cafetera De'Longhi Stilosa Máquina de café expreso manual en febrero 17-2023 porque la que tenia se rompio y el cafe salia tibio y hacia 7 meses que la habia comprado y quise tratar con otra compañia esta es muy buena compra y buen precio desde que llego se hizo el proceso de limpieza y se hizo la primera taza de expresso fue fantastica la espuma muy buena y el cafe caliente lo unico es que hay que pararla porque es manual pero es perfecta espero que siga funcionando haci porque tomamos bastante cafe en la casa nos encanta.Mi telefono esta dañado y no puedo poner las fotos y el video fue una gran compra. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on February 25, 2023 by Pedro C.

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