Never use pseudo-distributed mode
Mahout only pays off if you have data that is way too large to be analyzed on a single computer, but where you really need at least a dozen computers to hold and process the data.
The reason is the architecture. Mahout is built on top of map-reduce and relies on writing plenty of iterim data to disk, to be able to recover from crashes.
In pseudo-distributed mode, it cannot recover from such crashes well anyway.
Pseudo-distributed mode is okay if you want to learn installing and configuring Mahout, without having access to a real cluster. It is not reasonable to use for analyzing real data.
Instead, use the functionality built-in into Matlab, or use a clustering tool designed for single nodes such as ELKI. It will usually outperform Mahout by an order of magnitude by not writing everything to disk a number of times. In my experiments, these tools were able to outperform a 10 core Mahout cluster by a factor of 10 on a single core. Because I/O cost completely dominates runtime.
Benchmark yourself
If you don't trust me on this, benchmark yourself. Load the reuters data into Matlab, and cluster it there. I'm pretty sure, Matlab will make Mahout look like an old fad.