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Product test

Primadonna Soul by De'Longhi: a coffee goddess with an application to be desired

Martin Jungfer
3.12.2020
Translation: machine translated

When you invest well over CHF 1,000 in a machine, good coffee is no longer enough. De'Longhi, a manufacturer of fully automatic machines, has added an invention to its Primadonna Soul: the 'Bean Adapt' function. I tested this machine.

Our editorial team includes Simon Balissat, an experienced cafécionado. A tame machine tamer, he is our coordinator in the world of coffee beans, the man in whose veins caffeine flows. It's not a good idea to put an automatic coffee machine in his hands. So we decided against it. So it was I who got to test the new Primadonna Soul from De'Longhi. While our barista Simon Balissat talks shop, I receive the parcel from Northern Italy.

I'm one of those people who have to endure scorn tinged with pity and resentment from the Olympus of friend-bearers. I don't have the time - or don't want to take the time - to turn the beans into powder in the grinder, squeeze them into a tote, preferably to the gram, and burn my fingers on the boiling controls until the coffee flows into the cup.

The Primadonna Soul: replacement

So, now you know which school I belong to. I'm one of those people who drinks coffee made by automatic machines. Perhaps deep inside me lurks the desire to be a virtuoso. But my morning cappuccino has to find its place between the preparation of breakfast and the first video call. And after lunch, the espresso has to go fast.

So far, everything has worked perfectly. Ten minutes after opening the box, the machine was up and running. The one and a half pound pack of instructions in all sorts of languages proved useless. OK, you're probably going to tell me that a chimpanzee could operate such a machine. But De'Longhi has done a good job in terms of operation and hardware in my eyes.

Compared to the four-year-old Primadonna XS, some improvements are noticeable:

  • water tank inserted at the front;
  • grain level more visible;
  • milk trap for replenishment without removing the container from its base, useful when a lot is needed;
  • cover allowing the machine to be used without the milk carafe.

Congratulations here to the product designers who had this aesthetic in mind.

Large choice of drinks and carafe pourer

If the beverage selection isn't enough for you, or if you think your espresso should be less than or more than five millilitres, that's where the dedicated app, which is also handy for keeping the machine's display screen clean. Unless you don't mind.

Your machine optimisation is complete. If you want a different result, Bean Adapt technology allows you to adjust the extraction parameters of your grains.
Art de la formule à la De’Longhi

So, I can pretty much picture what this thing is trying to tell me. But I'm not satisfied with 'just about', especially from a machine that costs well over CHF 1,000. And certainly not when my personalised espresso doesn't appear as 'Espresso forte' on the drinks screen as I typed it in, but as 'Espresso f'. I'm pretty sure the full name of the default drink "Espresso macchiato" has more letters.

Once the settings have been made, all that's left to do is pour the espresso. If you don't like the result in the cup, the app will guide you to adjust the result to your taste. If the crema is too light or too dark, or if the espresso is too watery or too bitter, the machine will adjust the settings. You're the smart one, not the machine.

Overview: good coffee, an app that leaves something to be desired

For households with more than two coffee drinkers (or at least one excessive drinker), the Primadonna Soul is a suitable choice. In this case, you won't mind if the milk carafe, for example, only fits across the standard drinks compartment of the fridge and takes up the space there of two bottles of wine.

Similarly, you'll also have no problem making room in your kitchen for this 26 by 46 centimetre coffee pro. What's more, you'll be looking forward to the release - hopefully soon - of the new version of the app. The pleasure of 'ordering' a coffee with your fingertips from the office upstairs is disconcertingly simple, although you should remember to place a coffee cup under the nozzle beforehand.

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Journalist since 1997. Stopovers in Franconia (or the Franken region), Lake Constance, Obwalden, Nidwalden and Zurich. Father since 2014. Expert in editorial organisation and motivation. Focus on sustainability, home office tools, beautiful things for the home, creative toys and sports equipment. 


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