Rancilio Rocky Espresso Coffee Grinder

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$440.00


Price: $440.00
(as of Jan 14, 2025 19:53:05 UTC – Details)


Perfect companion to the Rancilio Silvia espresso machine. The Rocky SD is burr coffee grinder with 50mm plate grinding burrs found in entry-level commercial grinders. Capable of grinding up to 7.7lbs per hour the Rocky SD will be sure to keep up with your needs. The Rocky SD features a metal removable fork to hold your porta filter in place. Grinds directly into your porta filter. The motor of the Rocky SD is a 166-watt direct drive motor that is extremely powerful. Spinning at 1725 RPM’s. This powerful grinder is quiet during operation. Rocky SD features simple controls. Change the grind setting with a simple unlock of the lever and a quick spin of the bean hopper. It can grind coffee to a fine powder or course grind in seconds. The tinted bean hopper of the Rocky SD keeps just over 1/2 a pound of whole bean coffee fresh and ready to grind on-demand.
50mm commercial grade grinding burrs. Grinds directly into porta filter for simple operation
Powerful 166-watt direct drive quiet operation motor. All units are tested prior packaging which might leave a small trace of coffee residue. Please refer the video under product images for overview
Tinted hopper with a 0.65lb capacity. Please check the FAQ section under the Product Details
Simple variable grinder adjustment control. For Trouble Shooting Steps refer on the page 32 in the user manual
ATTENTION: Each unit is factory tested with real coffee beans and some coffee powder may still be present upon unboxing.

Customers say

Customers appreciate the electric food mill grinder’s grind quality, build quality, noise level, and adjustment range. They find it reliable, sturdy, and able to produce a fine enough grind for espresso. Many are satisfied with its ease of use and design. However, some customers have mixed opinions on value for money and cleaning ease.

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7 reviews for Rancilio Rocky Espresso Coffee Grinder

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  1. Amazon Customer

    The Zen of “the perfect expresso shot”
    You’re frustrated! Disillusioned! Stymied! All I want is a “Perfect Expresso” in my own kitchen. How difficult can this be? Want the answer? Read on….1. Ok, this Rocky simply blows my mind. What a fabulous & quiet coffee grinder.2. First, I have to laugh at those who “complain” that their grinder isn’t clean. There are coffee grinds in my machine they exclaim! Malarkey. Yes, there are fine remnants of ground beans on both the inside, the outside & the hopper. This is like complaining to a flood victim that your faucet is dripping…ha. As you go through the process of disking in your machine, you WILL get coffee grinds on your table, on your floor and on your hands…there will be coffee grinds everywhere. Good, you have been inoculated, read on.3. Thank you Seattle Coffee Gear for FedExing my grinder with tons of Styrofoam fingerlings that protected my precious cargo. It arrived in a big box which the FedEx agent said, “there’s a whole lot of something in this big box and a whole lot of nothing”. Great packing job Seattle Coffee Gear. Kudos to you. Hat tip!4. Do not fill up the hopper! The fine grain size can only be adjusted when the hopper & grinder are empty. You will thank me for this advice.5. The two grinding surfaces have to be rezero’d when changing setting, relocating to someone else’s house or having been sitting in storage. On an empty grinder, simply turn the setting back to zero then over to your desired setting number.6. Do not change settings unless you empty your grinder of all loose beans AND have emptied the beans in the grinding chamber itself. Yes, that means after you lift and invert the entire machine, then you MUST run the machine to grind any beans located at the grinding heads.7. Finally, a left handed coffee grinder! Woohoo! After decades of abuse for being left handed, Rancilio finally decided to make a machine to frustrate right handed people so that they can appreciate the plight of lefties. The grind button on at the bottom left face that can only be accessed with your left hand. Thank you Rancilio, thank you. So far there’s two left handed only devices: the Rocky and the 1911!8. The portafilter holder get in the way. Beats me how this is supposed to work. Holds the portafilter too high such that your mountain peak of grinds backs up inside of the elephant nozzolla that funnels the grinds from the machine to your portafilter. I hold the portafilter stationary with my right hand.9. In my photo, please strain to see the finest setting of grounds adjacent to a brand new nickel (that’s $0.05 cents to those outside the USA). Oh my god, the grinds feel like talcum powder. I’d never known that coffee could be ground this fine. I guess this is for Greek style coffee. Haven’t got a clue what’s Greek style coffee. I valiantly tried to take a photo to show you how microscopic the particles are as they sit on the face of a nickel. I’d be the first to admit that the talcum-like coffee clumps so it’s really difficult to make out a single grind particle. If you strain your eyes to NOT look at the particles but rather at the empty spaces…look for dust! That’s the ground size. Truly amazing. This is why the Rocky is such a fine instrument. Yes, I just compared a coffee grinder to a laser surgical tool!10. I bought (and highly recommend) The Brim Expresso Machine. The reason that I bring this up is because it automatically sets the time an extraction. I previously did not have that feature on my machine. If you are not a PRO, then I will strongly suggest that you will be better off buying The Brim or similar Expresso Machine prior to buying a Rocky. Why? Because you need to reduce the number of adjustable variable…or you will drop to your knees in a puddle of tears when your heartfelt journey for the coffee chalis turns to total frustration.11. Buy a stainless steel tamper. Again,to reduce variables, you must find ways to have seamless, easy consistency. Tricks like this are what it takes.12. Buy a big bag of coffee beans…er, buy two bags. You will need them. A quick trick is to survey all of the dozen different types of beans in the grocery store hopper. Yes, do not buy prepackaged… You will see one or two that look glossy. That’s oil. That’s good. That’s flavor. That’s usually French or Italian roast. Buy it.13. Another big, Big, BIG TIP! You need to reduce variables, so hunt for expresso machines that have a PRESSURE GAUGE. The Brim has two ranges on the gauge, one for beginners and one for you. 🙂 The beginner’s range is a low range to be used for beginners who use the portafilter that only has a single needle sized hole at the exit where the extracted coffee flows out of the portafilter into your cup. The tiny single hole allows a neophyte to “automatically” pressurized the portafilter. This required BIGGER grind sizes and thus it is more forgiving for the beginner. What is the beginner looking for? The beginner is looking for a grain size: too big a grain and the expresso is watery without flavor and complexity; too small a grain size and the expresso is underextracted with the portafilter behaving as if it was a solid block of coffee with no interstitial spaces for the water to flow.14. Bitter expresso. Bad. You know that you’ve done it. We ALL have. You want to be able to recognize bitterness. Bitterness is NOT a lack of sweetness or sugar. Train your taste buds to clearly recognize bitterness.15. Perfect Expresso. Until you actually pull your FIRST PERFECT SHOT, you will think that all expresso is bitter. No, a perfect shot is actually sweet tasting…no really. Wax on…wax off!16. Just to review, tamp at the same force, look at the pressure gauge, have an automatic timer built into your machine. Ok, now…let’s go! Time to pull shots. This is when you are going to get grinds on the floor, grinds on your table, and grinds on your shoes. (Remember the complaints about a dusting of grinds on a new machine…ha, ha)17. Goldilocks & the 3 Bears. One bed too hard and one bed too soft. Remember, you cannot change the grind number setting u less the beans have been emptied from not only the hopper(visible), but also the grinding plates(not visible). So, after emptying, you must run the machine (the left-handed machine if you’ve forgotten).18. At first, I would save the “bad samples” because that was real money that bought those beans. Now, I throw it down the drain. So, will you…eventually.19. If you haven’t figured it out yet, that wonderful talcum powder feel of the coffee grounds will be too fine for “a perfect extraction”. Sad but true.20. I hope that you found this helpful as I learned it the hard way…perhaps, that’s how learning is supposed to be? But it has been a 3 year random-walk journey through a game of thrones. Certainly, Rocky is an amazingly accurate tool with the power of a Samurai sword honed by a master swordssmith, refined through decades of use. Rocky is AMAZINGLY QUIET…stunningly so. I put this last so that you’d leave feeling the peaceful Zen of “the perfect expresso shot”. Rocky is the best. Buy it! Buy it now!UPDATE: June 10, 2019I never knew that the simple pleasure of extracting “The Perfect Expresso” would be as satisfying as discovering “The Holy Grail”. I adjusted the grind size as follows: 8, 10, 20, 15, 12, 13. For my beans, 13 created a gorgeous crema…unlike any that I had previously ever seen in my kitchen. A truly momentous experience akin to reaching out and touching the face of God. Unbelievable…I am truly stunned!UPDATE: June 14, 20191. It just gets better and better. I believe that this is “The Best Italian Import” brought to the US.2. Just when you think that you have mastered the perfect pull, you will find that you will want to make finely tuned adjustments to “the rate at which the pressure increases to optimal peak pressures”. So, this is what I did and what you:re likely to do. Read on. You will change the grind setting by 1. Great so you do the expresso pull. It’s good. So, you make another and it’s “Too Fine” which makes the pressure rise too quickly and ultimately go much higher in peak pressure. You will also note that your expresso shot glass isn’t as full because there was less total flow because the pressure was too high because the grind was too small. Why? Because you did not empty the grinder and there was a shots worth of grinds in the 90 degree plastic necked hopper and in between the 2 grinding surfaces. Correction: empty, then run the “left-handed” machine until completely empty.2. As you may have gleaned from my sneaking it into my above comments, I highly recommend buying a glass expresso shot glass. It will be a visible alarm system for when things are subtlety changing but would have otherwise gone unnoticed.2b. There are a number of glass expresso shot glasses on the market. All of mine just happen to be the insulating double walled type. In my humble opinion, your experience may differ, is that double walled insulating glasses DO NOT WORK. That is to say that the shot does not stay warmer any longer than without a double wall.2c. These double walled insulating expresso shot glasses actually vary in capacity even if to my eye, they all more or less look the same. This morning, I poured water from one full shot into another and it was only 2/3rds full.2d. So, if you are going for a pull based on X number of seconds, then your shot glass could mislead you into thinking you were either there or not there depending… Furthermore, if you have a self timed expresso machine that you (like me) haven’t made any adjustments to the time because you were “wisely reducing variables”, as on my wonderful Brim machine, then you would be “carefully calibrating your eyes” to how full the glass is when the pull is over. But if one glass varies from another by 2/3rds, then you have self created a misleading step in your repertoire. Consistency requires minimizing your variables.2e. First, I cannot believe I got to 2e when referring to just a simple shot glass. But here is more for you to assimilate into your “wax on, wax off” practice. “Crema”! Crema will look different for each of the Goldilocks Cases. But if you use a non-transparent cup, then you’ll be clueless. So, start using a glass expresso shot glass and watch how your skill improves. Really!2f. If you are making expresso for yourself, then you can do this. Otherwise, you can figure a way. If you are making Americanos or Cappucinos or whatever…take a sip from your shot glass. Teach yourself to recognize the bitterness from an overkill. Again, your skills will improve greatly.2g. Occasionally, just appreciate a perfect expresso…straight. You deserve it. You earned it. You are worth it. Enjoy.

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  2. None

    Stop skimping and make some great coffee!
    I love coffee. Its a several times a day thing for me. I appreciate good beans and have learned that next to that the grinder is the item that brings out all that a bean can be. Most under $150 grinders cannot produce espresso grinds, and certainly cannot cover Turkish. Well welcome to the Rocky, a solid built tank of a grinder that delivers a knock out punch to any kind of coffee you want to make. From french press to Turkish, this grinder has you covered. Its solid built and will seeming last a lifetime.The pros:* Its built like a brick house, solid sturdy, and with high quality. You wont be buying another one again so consider it a good investment.* Low rpm motor wont heat the beans when grinding* Easy to access grind chamber for cleaning* its adjustable for any kind of grind you can think of (I don’t agree with others that say no french press, its very capable of a course grind)* Fits under the counter, big but not unrulyCons:* You shell out $350 bucks to get this beast.* Some coffee remains in the grind chamber, so waste a little at the beginning of each grind to clean (discard) or tap the back of the unit at the end of the grind cycle to clear out old grinds.* Takes some experimentation to figure out the right setting for your machine, and that setting will change when you change beans to some degree.* Beans can get stuck in the screw holes inside the bean hopper. Silly but can be annoying. Remedied by flipping upside down or stuffing the holes with something. Id like to see Rancillo provide caps for this instead.If you are sick of replacing grinders every few years due to short lifespan, and want a machine that can make any type of grind, this is the one for you. And for the money, its best in class, some other Italian makers put you into the 500 price range and up.

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  3. Bereta

    Excelente , funiona facil y preciso . La tengo para uso en casa y estoy muy satisfecho por el funcionamiento .

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  4. Amazon Customer

    Third grinder to collection. Love it

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  5. Michael M.

    No! I am definitely in love! I cannot express enough how much I love this grinder. I’ve owned a Krups grinder for the past year that I purchased from Starbucks for approx $180 and have worked it mercilessly – we prepare at minimum 5 pots of coffee per day and often more. As a result it is now of a past nature. While it was serviceable and did grind consistently in size and quantity, it definitely had its drawbacks the most irritating being the mess, mess, and more mess when emptying the ground coffee as the grounds reservoir is plastic and statically charged causing the grounds to cling to the edges/top/sides as well as fly around when emptying. It was also loud (loud enough to wake the house) and had a fairly small capacity resulting in the need to grind multiple batches if I needed to prepare a sufficient quantity for multiple pots of coffee. Finally, it had limited choices for grind levels (12). The combination of these factors resulted in my husband refusing to grind coffee unless it was an emergency (I wasn’t available and coffee was needed, stat). Got my Rancilio today and I am already in love and then some. For those who care, it was delivered by FedEx 8 days after order including the Canada Day holiday, so probably will arrive in 7 days. It was carefully/securely packaged – interior cardboard box, packing peanuts, exterior cardboard box. The peanuts are the bio-degradable type made from vegetable starch. The unit is completely encased in a plastic bag within the interior box and well secured by cardboard baffles. It is ready for use once you’ve set the grind level (follow the simple instructions) and placement of bottom grounds plate that easily snaps in place. The portafilter can be readily removed to allow for larger canisters or your cone filter (or whatever you want to use to capture the ground beans) as it is a pressure fit. The hopper is a good size and stores sufficient beans such that you aren’t having to decant them every time you want coffee. The unit is pleasing to the eye, fits readily onto any counter as it has a slim profile and will compliment any decor as it is smart/sleek in appearance. Rancilio calibrates the grinding burrs in the factory before sending to the customer so do know you will find coffee grounds in the bag surrounding the unit so you’ll have to wipe the unit down with a damp cloth and brush to get all the grounds out of the crevices/seams (open on a counter that can be easily cleaned or put a tea towel or other catch cloth under it when opening the box). All of the prior is important and shows Rancilio manufactures a nice looking and cared-for product; but, the real factor of importance is how it works and boy, does it work! It is a quick, efficient, easy-to-use, and reasonably quiet unit that produces grounds of a uniform size. 40 settings are surely sufficient for even the most discerning of coffee-drinkers. I’ve spent the day refining the precise grind I prefer and after trying three settings I think I’ve found the sweet spot for my taste. I’ll come back in a year and let you all know how the unit is holding up but have full confidence that, barring any unforeseen accident/household catastrophe, it will be happily fulfilling the family’s coffee drinking needs for years to come. I cannot stress enough how much I’m in love with this grinder and, at this point, I’m sold on the unit’s quality and even the price. Given my Krups only gave me a year’s service at a cost of $180, all the Rancilio has to beat is two and a half years to work out the same. Based on the quality of manufacture/materials, I have every confidence it will be much more economical than the Krups over the longterm. Bottom line/TL;DR – if you’re a coffee-drinking fiend, buy it, you’ll love it.

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  6. Jan

    Vorweg – das teil ist echt gut und macht alles super. Nur der Hebel und das Dosieren scheint zumindest qualitativ nicht zum Rest zu passen. Der Hebel ist irgendwie leicht schwammig, auch wenn er absolut einwandfrei sein “Geschäft” erledigt 😉 Und die Dosierkammern scheinen auch nicht gerade so …stabil zu rotieren, tun aber auch makellos, was sie sollen, deswegen, wie gesagt “Jammere ich auf sehr hohem Niveau”, was eigentlich nicht nötig wäre, denn das Gerät an sich ist wirklich absolut empfehlenswert und Bombe ^^

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  7. JHONATAN

    Muy bien me gusta y luce espectacular 👌🏼

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