Quand la routine quotidienne semble physiquement gênante ou agaçanteDémonstration de configuration

Gaggia Classic Pro PID temperature starting points by roast level

This page is built as a working reference, not only a one-time article. Save it for later. Use it when you open a new bag of coffee, adjust your workflow after a roast change, or want a clearer starting point before making random grind changes.

Use this page forNew beans, shot reset days, and quick temperature checks before you change three other variables.
What it gives youStarting ranges, not rigid rules. The goal is faster dialing-in and less guesswork.
What it does not doReplace grinder quality, warm-up discipline, or cup tasting. It is a reference tool, not a magic setting.
Démonstration de configuration
Démonstration de configuration

Suggested PID starting points

These values are practical starting points for a Gaggia Classic Pro with a PID. They are not universal truths. Coffee density, dose, basket choice, and target style still matter. Use them as a first position, then adjust by taste.

Roast level Suggested PID starting range What to expect Common adjustment direction
Light roast 95 to 97 C Helps push sweetness and reduce hollow sharpness when extraction is otherwise well controlled. If the cup still feels thin or sharp, test slightly hotter before making large grind changes.
Medium-light roast 94 to 96 C Often a strong range for clarity with enough body. If bitterness rises too early, step down slightly and retest.
Medium roast 93 to 95 C Usually the easiest range for balanced daily espresso. If the shot feels flat, move a little hotter. If it feels dry, try slightly cooler.
Medium-dark roast 91.5 to 93.5 C Can protect sweetness without pushing too much roast bitterness. If the cup tastes harsh or smoky, test lower before changing dose.
Dark roast 90 to 92 C Often gives a rounder result and keeps bitterness under better control. If the shot feels too heavy or burnt, lower temperature first.

Why this reference exists

Many home baristas change grind size first because that variable feels easiest to control. But when the roast level changes, brew temperature can become a cleaner first adjustment. This is especially true when your previous recipe worked well and the new coffee suddenly feels too bright, too flat, or more bitter than expected.

That is why a reference page like this has long-term value. You do not need to remember every number. You only need one practical place to restart from.

Démonstration de configuration

Stock thermostat versus PID control

The image below is a simplified explanatory chart. It is not presented as a laboratory measurement. Its purpose is to show the practical difference that users are usually trying to solve: a wider stock swing versus a narrower, easier-to-repeat PID-controlled target.

Illustrative comparison of stock thermostat temperature swings versus PID controlled temperature stability on a Gaggia style machine

Workflow question Stock machine experience PID-controlled experience
Can I repeat yesterday’s shot more easily? Harder, because temperature timing can move the result more. Easier, because one large source of variation is reduced.
Can I trust the cup as feedback? Only partly, because several variables may be moving at once. More often, because cause and effect becomes clearer.
Does one new coffee require less guesswork? Usually no. The machine can feel harder to read. Usually yes. Starting points become more useful.