Gaggia Anima Bean To Cup Coffee Machine
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The Gaggia Anima is one of Gaggia’s more old-school bean to cup coffee machines at the low to mid range.
Similarly to the Brera it has simple buttons and little in the way of frills, as a result it’s one of Gaggias best bean to cup machines where value for money is concerned, and it’s also very durable.
While the Gaggia Brera is probably my favourite simple, manual milk frother bean to cup machine for the more budget conscious, if you have a slightly higher budget (about £50 more), and if you have a bit more vertical space available (the Anima is slightly taller and the tank is top filling), then I would definitely put the Anima on your short list.
|titlestrong Features and Benefits |
showbullet 1.8 L water tank |
showbullet Automatic pr-infusion |
showbullet Top filling water tank for uninterrupted coffee |
showbullet Grinder bypass chute for pre-ground coffee |
showbullet 5 dose options from 7-11g |
showbullet True double shot (two consecutive singles) |
showbullet Pannarello steam wand for manual milk frothing (three other versions available) |
showbullet Max cup height of 11.5cm |
showbullet Max internal waste bin of 15 used pucks of coffee |
showbullet Compact size of 22.1cm wide, 43cm deep, 34cm tall |
The main differences of the Anima vs the Brera (and this is the most common question I’m asked about both machines, meaning people looking at the Anima will ask about the Brera and vice versa) are:
|titlestrongAnima has a top-filling 1.9L water tank |
The Brera has a front accessed 1.2L water tank. If you’re struggling for height under kitchen wall units, the Brera is better in this regard as you pull the water tank out from the front, if you can easily access the top of the machine though, then with the Anima this means if you run out of water as you’re making coffee you can fill it up while it’s brewing.
|titlestrongAnima has 5 dose settings |
The Brera has 3 bean options, one bean is roughly 7g (depending on the coffee beans, roast profile and grind size), two bean is 9g, and three bean is 11g. The Anima has these bean settings but in addition, it has 8g and 10g options, which probably isn’t a huge deal to most people, it just gives you a bit more choice when it comes to dose.
|titlestrongAnima Accommodates slightly bigger cups |
Again not a major deal, but the max cup size with the anima models is approx 15cm, and the max is approx 12cm with the Brera.
|titlestrongAnima Has a Bigger Dreg Drawer |
The internal dreg draw on the Anima will take 16 pucks of coffee, which is double that of the 8 pucks capacity of the Brera.
So these aren’t huge differences, and it’s worth noting that they both have identical grinders and brewing units, as far as I’m aware, so the cup quality is likely to be practically the same for both.
The Anima does have a number of versions available, the Anima Black is the lowest cost option and has a panarello steam wand, the Anima Barista Plus has a pro steam wand.
The Gaggia Anima Range Reviewed
The Deluxe has a cappuccinatore (pronounced cappuccino toray) which is basically the same frother that comes with the one touch carafes, but without the carafe, and both the class one touch and the prestige one touch, both have one touch milk carafes.
For more details on Gaggia coffee machines see this review:
Gaggia Coffee Machines Review