Espresso is brewed by using an espresso machine to force a small amount of nearly boiling water and steam - about 86 to 95 °C (187 to 203 °F) - under pressure through finely ground and compacted coffee.The espresso machine was patented in 1901 from an earlier 1884 machine,and developed in Italy; with the invention of the Gaggia machine, espresso spread in popularity to the UK in the 1950s where it was more often drunk with milk as cappuccino due to the influence of the British milk bars,then America in the 1980s where again it was mainly drunk with milk,and then via coffeehouse chains it spread worldwide.Espresso is generally denser than coffee brewed by other methods, having a higher concentration of suspended and dissolved solids; it generally has a creamy foam on top termed "crema".Espresso is the base for a number of other coffee drinks, such as latte, cappuccino, macchiato, mocha, and Americano.