Please make a custom built espresso holder/maker, that can actually withstand the pressures, use thick steel & rubber seals & whatever is needed to make it work :) Maybe a longer/deeper "water cylinder" (whatever it's called) that the "plunger"(?) goes down through. I dislike coffee, but I really want to see this work :D
74 yr. old Canadian here. My mom was born in Finland and I grew up speaking "Finglish". Even though most of my Finn relatives have passed, I still can tell if I enter a Finnish household from the smell of coffee and kahvi leipää. Heavenly!
Time for Finnish cafés to start springing up all around the world. You walk in, there's a 300 ton hydraulic press behind the counter, and a big, bald barista with a big smile asks if you'd like to try the "Espresso 5 million".
I think it will be interesting if he make a giant scaled up espresso brewer, like, basket the size of a big bucket, and it brew into a giant tank with a tap. Really interested in seeing how 20kg of espresso pulled looks like. rofl The key to this is to have consistent pressure of 9 bars, but through huge coffee puck, there is no other way to brew such monstrosity without a hydraulic press.
You folks absolutely need to continue this series; This has been without a doubt my favourite of your videos, you had me in absolute tears with laughter. Maybe a single follow up video with Lauri where you over-engineer a working solution? Thanks for the laughs!
agree on making a series or at least a follow up, you can do all sorts of smoothies and fruit juices, and it alays makes me smile to see what crazy new ideas the channel comes up with
@@SailingAquamarine I guess you need to weld it... I mean, at most its water with 300bar pressure, if there is ANY gap it'll find its way and burst out, or maybe a really perfectly worked, long thread would be enough, don't know.
I had an idea for a video while building hydraulic lines yesterday and thought it would be a perfect project for you, use the 300 ton press to press a smaller diameter piston to generate extremely hight pressures, which has a small section of hydraulic hose which is capped off, it would be very interesting to see the different types of fittings and hoses pressurized to failure. 3000psi hose vs higher pressure hoses exploding NPT, JIC, ORB etc, (each types weakness) Also pipe tape vs liquid thread sealers
Make the brewing cup out of 1" thick steel with the smallest possible holes drilled in the bottom, and use a 1/2" thick end grain cut of wood as the coffee filter
From italy with ❤....the only channel that seems to me the most interesting and entertaining of all i love your extremely beautiful country with beautiful people.. success in all that you achieve from day to day🙋
I love the fact that you tried first to do the reasonable and test the equipment at making espresso coffee the "proper" way at around 8 Bar. Then of course ramping it up afterwards for the fun factor! This was actually my most looked forward to video from Hydraulic Press Channel ever since the community post.
Maybe you could have a series with other TH-camrs making extreme coffee. I could see Colin Furze, The Hacksmith, Alec Steele, backyard scientist, and even Mark Rober joining in the fun
I bought some coffee from coffee Lauri (or one of his friends) two weeks ago in Gothenburg! It was one of the tastiest coffees available at the best price at the huge coffee expo.
Should use the underwater simulation setup. Put raw grounds in the water, and up the pressure to see the pressure causing the extraction from the grounds. Then, filter*that*
A video near and dear to my heart. I'm sitting here watching with a mug of very strong coffee, and even though I'm American, most people think my coffee should be way less strong. Personally, I want my coffee even stronger, but I'm about at the limit of what the tools I have available can do.
Get an E&B labs competition moka filter! You end up having to go back to a drip-ish grind but the filter adds so much backpressure you end up with a way longer contact time so the extraction is much more complete than with a fine grind and the normal filter. It slows the brew time enough to make timing the brew to avoid under/over extraction much easier, too.
I would love to see more videos on this with improved design. Love the channel but ive never been more engaged and entertained by a vid of yours. Amazing job
I think an important part is to measure the amount of water you pour in first, so the espresso has just enough water for how much will soak the beans + how much you want in your cup.
I recommend using your extruder [Tall cylinder with small hole spigot] Connect a high pressure hose to that spigot and route it to an enclosed container with a small air hole for pressure relief.
Add a relief hole on the side of the water-chamber with a valve on it. This allows you to fill the chamber full of water, then align the piston and gently push it in with the valve open a bit so you can replace the water with the piston. Now you close the valve and make coffee! This also lets you reduce the total volume of water a bit so the coffee is not watery.
Wtf 😂 It has been maybe a couple of years since I watched any videos of his, and oh boy, what a pleasant surprise it was to know that my man still hasn't killed himself AND just as cool and funny with his unique character and “Finglish” accent. I'm definitely gonna binge-watch some more of their videos this night! 😂 Also, the funny and wholesome mistake of showing the website cropped out a bit @16:16 just makes it even funnier! 😂😂 Big love and best wishes from a Syrian guy here ✌🏼.
I've been watching this channel for what seems like longer than I have been alive. I don't watch every single video but pretty often I see stuff that that just catches my eye and then I watch a video about 300 tonne coffee. Great work folks. You've kept me entertained and curious for a long long time. Thank you.
You should put a ton of ground coffee into your pressure chamber and force the water into the coffee! Then you can press it back out!!!!!!!!! That might actually be pretty tasty thinking about it....
I really hope he continues this series. It would be very interesting to see how he fixes these issues. Like he said, you need to make parts that can endure very high pressure for about 30 seconds so the coffee can extract. For an ultra fine grind, he can buy pre ground Turkish coffee
This channel is Awesome! Gives a good break from all the other stuff on TH-cam that just pisses you off and ruins your day.. Thanks my Scandinavian brother and sister
HPC can open a new restaurant called "Coffee Cannon", with the slogan: "Express Espresso in 0.3 seconds or less, and if you suffer injection injury, your coffee is FREE!"
I'm so happy about this one. It touches my heart and caffeine addiction. The amount of effort in machining and tolerance is awesome. That is why we love this channel. Extremes amounts of effort for comedy is the actual funny part.
Great content. I'd like to see you machine a group head that complements the pressure of the press forcing 100% of the water through the grinds. Something like a small cylinder with thread that screws into where the handle normally goes perhaps.
He answered this one a LONG time ago -- he did some more research and he believes that he probably could do it but there would be no way to observe it, so it would make a terrible video.
My daughter, who is the Metrology Engineer for a large OEM oil filter mfg., walked through my room while you were pressing. She started naming all of the tonnages of their presses used in making parts for oil filters. From 10 tons to 600 tons. She is responsible for making sure all measuring equipment used is in calibration. She works in 10 millions of inches to much larger gauges. She is also certified to test and repair gauges used in measuring the measuring gauges. She has to go to their other factories to check that their equipment is accurate.
She said it looked nice but did not have enough tonnage to press as many oil filter base plates in one push as their production requires. She listed the number and tonnage of just the ones she remembers and it amazed me. I understand the filter can presses are fast and stout. Maybe I will remember to ask her sometime.@@DH-xw6jp
Probably due to the cold weather, one thing Canadians and Finns have in common is our love for coffee! Per capita, we are the biggest caffeine consumers in the world, Finland being at the top. To this, I raise my cup, and salute you friend! ☕💥 Thanks for making these. Stay warm, winter's almost over!
Not only this title by it's couldn't be ignored, but the moment you start the video you're greeted with a lovely Finnish accent. Wasn't disappointed at all with the actual experiement hahaha. Love form Russia, bless you
As an engineer (albeit electrical) and a coffee lover I think you would need to build a portafilter and an espresso basket specifically for this application. The espresso baskets currently are stamped out of a really thin piece of metal and then drilled. They are targeted for 9-11 bars of pressure (standard for espresso is 9 bars actually) so they are not designed to handle a press machine. And besides the basket, the locking system of the portafilter to the espresso "machine" body is similarly not designed to withstand that pressure. So whenever you try to push the water through the espresso puck (which is insanely compressed after you pressed it with a hydraulic press) the water essentially finds a smaller resistance path through the sides of the portafilter rather than the puck itself. So you need to, at the very least, design the body where you mount the portafilter to, so that the steel column extends deep inside the portafilter and has a very good o-ring so that it seals shut the "puck" from the "outside" of the portafilter. Perhaps even have it go all the way down to the bottom of the basket itself and then load the coffee grounds and tamp it from the top. I.e. just have a big thick cylinder with an o-ring at the bottom lip that extends inside the portafilter and espresso basket and just use the portafilter as a way to "seal off" that big cylinder. I would be really curious what pressures you would be able to achieve then and how the coffee would taste. Perhaps Lauri could also make a super light roast to compensate for the extremely increased extraction of the high pressure! Would be a very exciting experimente
Maybe some machining company specialized in edm or laser micromachining could manufacture some sturdier filters and even with different filter hole sizes?
Thanks to Lauri from Good Life Coffee for visiting us and helping with the video! Go check out their websites and shop goodlifecoffee.fi/en
Kiitos to BOTH Lauri. 😉
lmao i love how yall have the same name
Can you put my Head in that cofe thing? I wanna drink me self.
Please make a custom built espresso holder/maker, that can actually withstand the pressures, use thick steel & rubber seals & whatever is needed to make it work :)
Maybe a longer/deeper "water cylinder" (whatever it's called) that the "plunger"(?) goes down through.
I dislike coffee, but I really want to see this work :D
What can i say? This made me want a coffee. Fun as always Lauri
I can hear James Hoffmann scream in the distance.
Dude the crossover nobody knew we needed
The crossover nobody knew we needed
9 bar brew pressure? Nah. 9000 bar brew pressure.
Lol I can picture the face and "oh, dreadful" 😂😂😂
2:58 He even preheated the cylinder, he know coffee basic. rofl
74 yr. old Canadian here. My mom was born in Finland and I grew up speaking "Finglish". Even though most of my Finn relatives have passed, I still can tell if I enter a Finnish household from the smell of coffee and kahvi leipää. Heavenly!
heh, two weeks ago I met a canadian guy who moved to finland... Seems like a lot of travel between the two
Time for Finnish cafés to start springing up all around the world. You walk in, there's a 300 ton hydraulic press behind the counter, and a big, bald barista with a big smile asks if you'd like to try the "Espresso 5 million".
Okay, maybe the technology isn't quite there yet. However, I believe in the HPC R&D team to get us to industrial espresso in the near future.
"Wuld juu like to hääv the espresso five miljön?"
With "here we go!" Everytime make a cuppa
This made me laugh my lung out :D
Press-o coffee, guaranteed Pretty Good.
"Better than gas station" is probably the greatest compliment that can be given for a 300 tonne espresso machine 😅
That's not Espresso, that's just Press-o.
I think we managed to make quite lot of things in this video, not sure how close they were espresso or any other drinkable coffee product :D
Spanish….es press-o.
Extrapresso
shame the press was brand new and not old, it would be an ex-press-o then
Instant press-o coffee.
"I'm only doing this because I can"
That's how everyone should live.
It is the best reason to do anything.
Except clone dinosaurs.
So this is that "instant coffee" I've been hearing about...
The setup takes about one hour per cup but the actual pressing part is quite instant :D
Here is the comment I was looking for!
Preheating coffee machine like ancient hot bulp semidiesel. When hot it will run all the day?
This needs a revisit, with all parts machined! Genius
My first thought was "300 ton coffee? Is he mad?"
Then I thought "Of course he is; that's why I've subscribed to this channel!"
I am professional mad man
@@HydraulicPressChannel Fair point. You get paid to be mad. The rest of us are amateurs compared to you. 😂
I think it will be interesting if he make a giant scaled up espresso brewer, like, basket the size of a big bucket, and it brew into a giant tank with a tap. Really interested in seeing how 20kg of espresso pulled looks like. rofl The key to this is to have consistent pressure of 9 bars, but through huge coffee puck, there is no other way to brew such monstrosity without a hydraulic press.
Just listen to Finnish metal, look at Finnish art, and examine Finnish architecture. Finland produces some serious mad geniuses.
Waiting patiently for the James Hoffman review.
Hames Joffman is on it 😂
@@androiduberalles It all comes full circle, doesn't it?
😂😂i came looking for the James comment.. lol
You folks absolutely need to continue this series; This has been without a doubt my favourite of your videos, you had me in absolute tears with laughter. Maybe a single follow up video with Lauri where you over-engineer a working solution? Thanks for the laughs!
I have already plans how to make this work on higher pressure. I just need to make all the parts myself or use hydraulics components :D
agree on making a series or at least a follow up, you can do all sorts of smoothies and fruit juices, and it alays makes me smile to see what crazy new ideas the channel comes up with
@@HydraulicPressChannelyes, I think you need a screw in basket, rather than the group handle. All the water is going over the top as a bypass!
@@SailingAquamarine I guess you need to weld it... I mean, at most its water with 300bar pressure, if there is ANY gap it'll find its way and burst out, or maybe a really perfectly worked, long thread would be enough, don't know.
I had an idea for a video while building hydraulic lines yesterday and thought it would be a perfect project for you, use the 300 ton press to press a smaller diameter piston to generate extremely hight pressures, which has a small section of hydraulic hose which is capped off, it would be very interesting to see the different types of fittings and hoses pressurized to failure. 3000psi hose vs higher pressure hoses exploding
NPT, JIC, ORB etc, (each types weakness)
Also pipe tape vs liquid thread sealers
Make the brewing cup out of 1" thick steel with the smallest possible holes drilled in the bottom, and use a 1/2" thick end grain cut of wood as the coffee filter
I think you can use same brewing cup, just make thick and tight support for the brewing cup with single hole at the bottom.
😂😂
From italy with ❤....the only channel that seems to me the most interesting and entertaining of all i love your extremely beautiful country with beautiful people.. success in all that you achieve from day to day🙋
I just sat down to watch your video with my French Press coffee. Now I get to watch the Finnish Press method.
I love the fact that you tried first to do the reasonable and test the equipment at making espresso coffee the "proper" way at around 8 Bar.
Then of course ramping it up afterwards for the fun factor!
This was actually my most looked forward to video from Hydraulic Press Channel ever since the community post.
Extreme coffee brewing could be a new content category. I'm sure there's an audience for it.
Maybe you could have a series with other TH-camrs making extreme coffee. I could see Colin Furze, The Hacksmith, Alec Steele, backyard scientist, and even Mark Rober joining in the fun
Add vacuum boiled milk? (edit) and Primitive Technology coffee planting, roasting, cup & pots
I bought some coffee from coffee Lauri (or one of his friends) two weeks ago in Gothenburg! It was one of the tastiest coffees available at the best price at the huge coffee expo.
Should use the underwater simulation setup.
Put raw grounds in the water, and up the pressure to see the pressure causing the extraction from the grounds.
Then, filter*that*
Make it much larger!!!! 10 litre of espresso in 30 seconds!!!!!!!
Next step is to make all the parts myself to increase the pressure rating of the system :D
"slightly better than most gas stations" is high praise from a barista champion
I’ve learned a new phrase today: “coffee shrapnel’ 🎉🎉🎉 And the enthusiasm of our expert for the taste was, well, ummmmm….. interesting.
I am pretty sure that we witnessed the first time anybody has ever used that phrase :D
That's because Lauri accidentally put explosive instead of coffee.
@@robinbrowne5419Next up: three-way collab with the two Lauris and Pommijätkät, making coffee with dynamite
@@Ralesk Yup. Was that the day it was raining coffee.
@@RaleskSeconded. The world needs this collab.
The silliness of this channel is always wholesome fun!
This is the German level of over engineering I came here for. Excellent, guys. Thank you!
They're not German.
@@DaveC2729 I know they aren't German. I'm German. They are from the North.
But closer to Germany than Oregon, so that's German enough for me. 😁
Besides, that was a compliment.
No, that is Finish over engineering. Germans would not have shown us the explosions😂
@@jtkachlmeierI bet you’re one of those Germans who still uses the 1930’s boarders
we need more Lauri featuring Lauri
Oh! James Hoffman needs to be involved in this! :D
The email has been sent, we await his response
You mean finnish version, Jaakko Hoppimanen
I was thinking the same thing.
@@ChristopherPeter Puck destroyer 9000.
The new chamber sounds GREAT! Thank you!!!
Haha, love the new press and the bullet proof room it is in
This is the literal Bulletproof Coffee.
“Coffee Lauri” is the best nickname ever
Him: *“Don't drink it”*
Lauri: *“isntantly drinks it”*
I just love Hannah´s laughter. The finnish way to make espresso
A video near and dear to my heart. I'm sitting here watching with a mug of very strong coffee, and even though I'm American, most people think my coffee should be way less strong. Personally, I want my coffee even stronger, but I'm about at the limit of what the tools I have available can do.
Time to upgrade your tools to include a hydraulic press!
I was drinking my morning espresso and then find this.
Get an E&B labs competition moka filter! You end up having to go back to a drip-ish grind but the filter adds so much backpressure you end up with a way longer contact time so the extraction is much more complete than with a fine grind and the normal filter. It slows the brew time enough to make timing the brew to avoid under/over extraction much easier, too.
I would love to see more videos on this with improved design. Love the channel but ive never been more engaged and entertained by a vid of yours. Amazing job
I think an important part is to measure the amount of water you pour in first, so the espresso has just enough water for how much will soak the beans + how much you want in your cup.
Lauri: "It's 130°. Is that good coffee temperature?"
Me: "Oh, that doesn’t sound so bad. Oh, right. Celsius."
I'd like to see a follow up with a portafilter and basket that can handle high pressure. You can use cold water, as the high pressure makes up for it.
I recommend using your extruder [Tall cylinder with small hole spigot] Connect a high pressure hose to that spigot and route it to an enclosed container with a small air hole for pressure relief.
"Aside from the filter, everything was perfect..." 😂😂😂😂😂
I can't wait to see the new windows go in!
Fantastic, I can’t wait for version 2! You have to make a more substantial group handle 😊
Add a relief hole on the side of the water-chamber with a valve on it.
This allows you to fill the chamber full of water, then align the piston and gently push it in with the valve open a bit so you can replace the water with the piston.
Now you close the valve and make coffee! This also lets you reduce the total volume of water a bit so the coffee is not watery.
I really hope this will continue. It would be very interesting to see how you would make it so it wouldn't self destruct.
Thanks!
You just combined my two favorite things to watch on TH-cam!! What a time to be alive!
The best part of waking up is 300 ton pressed coffee in your cup.
😂😂
love it! we need part 2 where you perfect this and actually make good coffee
Wtf 😂
It has been maybe a couple of years since I watched any videos of his, and oh boy, what a pleasant surprise it was to know that my man still hasn't killed himself AND just as cool and funny with his unique character and “Finglish” accent. I'm definitely gonna binge-watch some more of their videos this night! 😂
Also, the funny and wholesome mistake of showing the website cropped out a bit @16:16 just makes it even funnier! 😂😂
Big love and best wishes from a Syrian guy here ✌🏼.
I've been watching this channel for what seems like longer than I have been alive. I don't watch every single video but pretty often I see stuff that that just catches my eye and then I watch a video about 300 tonne coffee. Great work folks. You've kept me entertained and curious for a long long time. Thank you.
I like my coffee nordic style: without water.
You should put a ton of ground coffee into your pressure chamber and force the water into the coffee! Then you can press it back out!!!!!!!!! That might actually be pretty tasty thinking about it....
James Hoffman started weeping uncontrollably the minute this came out, and he still has no idea why.
I really hope he continues this series. It would be very interesting to see how he fixes these issues. Like he said, you need to make parts that can endure very high pressure for about 30 seconds so the coffee can extract. For an ultra fine grind, he can buy pre ground Turkish coffee
Some ball milled coffee haha.
This is 'reasonable' cofee making :)
at least I tried to start at reasonable coffee making :D
This channel is Awesome! Gives a good break from all the other stuff on TH-cam that just pisses you off and ruins your day..
Thanks my Scandinavian brother and sister
HPC can open a new restaurant called "Coffee Cannon", with the slogan:
"Express Espresso in 0.3 seconds or less, and if you suffer injection injury, your coffee is FREE!"
😅
This is my first video of yours I have seen. Very entertaining and enjoyable👍
This is the stuff I want to see! Innovative!
I'm so happy about this one. It touches my heart and caffeine addiction. The amount of effort in machining and tolerance is awesome. That is why we love this channel. Extremes amounts of effort for comedy is the actual funny part.
This might just be the most absurd and hilarious video I've seen on this channel, and I'm 100% here for it
Long years wthout watching this channel. So awesome videos
That's not an espresso, it's an esPRESSo
Nice... I love coffe!
I think you have to revisit this but then with your custom made coffe handle to avoid leaks.
I want James Hoffman to comment "AAAHHHHHHHHH" on this video so badly
I like it as well 😂
"The only reason we are doing this is because we can".
That is an excellent reason!
Increasing the Bar in Barista…
Most underrated joke in the whole comments section!
Thank you for this video. Great idea with coffee. Every time I am amazed by these absolutely fantastic and very funny test ideas to see.
"it is espresso not expresso"
HPC: "no its very express"
Your Barista friend was a great addition to this video, great chemistry between you two!
So Hydraulic Press brand coffee when? 😃
I think I have to team up with coffee Lauri with this one if this concept gets going :D
I'm really curious if we crush coffee beans or extrude it through tiny hole instead of grinding them with burrs, would it turned out as good ground.
Crushing things *and* coffee. This video really speaks to me on a personal level.
lmaooo this guy is a maniac i love it
Great content.
I'd like to see you machine a group head that complements the pressure of the press forcing 100% of the water through the grinds.
Something like a small cylinder with thread that screws into where the handle normally goes perhaps.
You planned to make ice 7. Did you forget about it or are you planning to do it later?
He answered this one a LONG time ago -- he did some more research and he believes that he probably could do it but there would be no way to observe it, so it would make a terrible video.
This is brilliant
My daughter, who is the Metrology Engineer for a large OEM oil filter mfg., walked through my room while you were pressing. She started naming all of the tonnages of their presses used in making parts for oil filters. From 10 tons to 600 tons. She is responsible for making sure all measuring equipment used is in calibration. She works in 10 millions of inches to much larger gauges. She is also certified to test and repair gauges used in measuring the measuring gauges. She has to go to their other factories to check that their equipment is accurate.
But can she make coffee with a 600-ton press?
And what was her opinion of the hydraulic coffee press?
She said it looked nice but did not have enough tonnage to press as many oil filter base plates in one push as their production requires. She listed the number and tonnage of just the ones she remembers and it amazed me. I understand the filter can presses are fast and stout. Maybe I will remember to ask her sometime.@@DH-xw6jp
This is wonderful!
PERFECT! I want one.
Please continue on this effort ❤ would be a very cool project
This video smells great!
I like his very polite way of saying it's not gonna taste good.
That was pretty fun. You made me laugh a few times 😁 I enjoy your humor.
Probably due to the cold weather, one thing Canadians and Finns have in common is our love for coffee! Per capita, we are the biggest caffeine consumers in the world, Finland being at the top.
To this, I raise my cup, and salute you friend! ☕💥 Thanks for making these. Stay warm, winter's almost over!
Pure comedy gold, Love it!
that video was a lot of fun, many thanks for the laughs!
this NEEDS to be a running series
Not only this title by it's couldn't be ignored, but the moment you start the video you're greeted with a lovely Finnish accent. Wasn't disappointed at all with the actual experiement hahaha. Love form Russia, bless you
I'm italian and the guys from this coffe place are really great!
This is 10/10 youtube, thank you
James would love this
As an engineer (albeit electrical) and a coffee lover I think you would need to build a portafilter and an espresso basket specifically for this application. The espresso baskets currently are stamped out of a really thin piece of metal and then drilled. They are targeted for 9-11 bars of pressure (standard for espresso is 9 bars actually) so they are not designed to handle a press machine. And besides the basket, the locking system of the portafilter to the espresso "machine" body is similarly not designed to withstand that pressure.
So whenever you try to push the water through the espresso puck (which is insanely compressed after you pressed it with a hydraulic press) the water essentially finds a smaller resistance path through the sides of the portafilter rather than the puck itself. So you need to, at the very least, design the body where you mount the portafilter to, so that the steel column extends deep inside the portafilter and has a very good o-ring so that it seals shut the "puck" from the "outside" of the portafilter. Perhaps even have it go all the way down to the bottom of the basket itself and then load the coffee grounds and tamp it from the top. I.e. just have a big thick cylinder with an o-ring at the bottom lip that extends inside the portafilter and espresso basket and just use the portafilter as a way to "seal off" that big cylinder.
I would be really curious what pressures you would be able to achieve then and how the coffee would taste. Perhaps Lauri could also make a super light roast to compensate for the extremely increased extraction of the high pressure! Would be a very exciting experimente
This is the most manly way of making coffee 😎😍
X-Press-O
Truly a delightful, another technological triumph!
ABSOLUTELY---->>>>>> AWESOME!!!!!!!!!! 🙂
US home based small startup roaster here ($10k/yr), love the content and the collab!
Maybe some machining company specialized in edm or laser micromachining could manufacture some sturdier filters and even with different filter hole sizes?
Now THAT is Instant Coffee!
11:48 gives new meaning to a "shot of espresso"
I cant decide if I should buy a press or the coffee. But I would watch him in an ad maybe 50 times.
I have small kitchen for this setup. But impressive.
Nice guy with a good sense of humor