
The first Italian woman in space is now the world's first
orbiting barista.
Over the weekend, astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti fired up the
first espresso machine in space. She posted a photo of herself on
Twitter from the International Space Station on Sunday, sipping from a cup designed for use in
zero-gravity.
For the special occasion, she put on her "Star Trek" uniform
top.
"Coffee: the finest organic suspension ever devised,"
Cristoforetti said via Twitter, quoting from the old TV series,
"Star Trek: Voyager. "
"Fresh espresso in the new Zero-G cup! To boldly brew...," she
added.
Cristoforetti, who returns to Earth next week following a
half-year mission, almost didn't get any space espresso. The
experimental, Italian-made espresso maker, dubbed ISSpresso using
the International Space Station initials, was supposed to arrive in
January, but didn't get to orbit until April because of a shipment
backlog.
How did she like the space brew? She didn't say on Twitter, but
she was all smiles for the cameras and gave a thumbs-up. It had to
beat NASA's instant coffee, drunk by straw from a pouch. The
espresso actually is brewed in a clear pouch, behind the closed
door of the boxy coffee maker, and that's how Cristoforetti and
NASA crewmate Scott Kelly first sampled it. Cristoforetti later
switched to the small, pitcher-like zero-g cup, a new American-made
item.
Italy's 120-year-old coffee maestro Lavazza and the Turin-based
engineering firm Argotec, which teamed up on the space espresso
project with the Italian Space Agency, were thrilled to see their
260-mile-high results.
"Today the International Space Station feels a little more like
home," Lavazza said via Twitter.
The space espresso maker uses small capsules, or pods, of
espresso coffee. Fifteen coffee capsules flew up with the machine
aboard a Space X
cargo carrier, as well as five capsules for flushing out the
system. More coffee capsules are available for launch if requested
by the six-person crew.