Find the next useful page before you buy the next part.
The HomeBaristaMods Guides Library is built to do more than explain products. It should help you diagnose the problem, find the right first move, and keep the most useful Gaggia notes in one place.
Open the bookmarkable learning desk.
This is the fastest way to reach the pages people are most likely to save and reopen: temperature tables, offset explainers, and symptom-first upgrade logic.
Open quick lookup pagesStart with roast-level PID temperature ranges.
Use one quick lookup page when a new coffee feels too sharp, too flat, or just different from the bag before it. Then use the first-shot checklist when the second shot keeps behaving better than the first.
Open PID temperature pageLearn what the PID display does and does not mean.
Offset confusion wastes time. This library page helps you separate the display number, the brew path, and the final cup result. It pairs well with a first-shot checklist when warm-up still feels uncertain.
Open PID offset pageChoose the first upgrade by symptom, not by hype.
Use a simple decision path when you are stuck between a PID, a workflow fix, a comfort accessory, or a grinder problem.
Open symptom guideKnow which projects need a meter before they need a parts cart.
Use the mod safety matrix to separate low-risk mechanical upgrades from electrical projects that need zero-voltage checks, continuity checks, and clearer stop conditions.
Open safety matrixExplore flavor language with a visual wheel.
Use a click-through flavor tool to connect fruity, floral, chocolate, and processing terms to more practical espresso decisions.
Open flavor wheelMatch bean style, process, and temperature in one place.
Use the bean selector and brew calculator when you want a practical first answer to what kind of coffee to buy, where to start with temperature, and what shot ratio to test first.
Open bean selectorMap roast density and cup problems into a cleaner next move.
Beschikbare talen.
Open coffee compassUse the site the way a specialist would.
Check one library page, confirm the likely cause, then move into the matching article, guide, or product page. That is how the store becomes more useful than a normal parts catalog.