Showing posts with label stove top percolator. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stove top percolator. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Coffee Making Without Technology

In this day and age, coffee making has become something of an art. Specialty coffee shops have sprung up all over, and it would be hard to drive down a city street without seeing at least one or two. These days, coffee is more than just brewing a strong cup on the stove. There are fancy coffee makers, espresso machines, and cappuccino machines, and a host of coffee flavors and different coffee additives, such as flavored creamers or syrups.

There are times, however, when making a fancy cup of coffee is out of the question. Perhaps you are out roughing it in the wilderness, you forgot your stove-top percolator, and you still want at least a good black cup of coffee but aren't sure what to do. Believe it or not, there is a trick to coffee making that doesn't include electricity or even a stove-top percolator.

Of course, even if you are lacking a coffee maker or a coffee pot, you are still going to need your basic ground coffee, and you are going to need a heat source. Hopefully, if you are on a remote camping trip, you still remembered the coffee, even if you didn't remember the stove-top percolator; and of course, most campers have campfires or camping stoves fueled by some type of gas. It can actually be a rewarding experience to use some old-fashioned ingenuity when it comes to the simple act of making coffee without a coffee pot; it helps us remember that we are not always slaves to modern technology.

The method you can use to make yourself a cup of coffee is to use a couple of paper towels, a regular pot or pan, and a cup - either a coffee cup or any cup that can hold hot liquid. Place a couple of paper towels over the cup, and then place some coffee grounds on paper towels. Heat the water over your campfire or on your camp stove until it is boiling, and then carefully, and slowly, pour the heated water over the coffee grounds and paper towels so that it filters into the cup. The more slowly you pour the water in, the stronger your cup of coffee should be. If you don't think the coffee is strong enough the first time, carefully remove the paper towels with the coffee grounds on top, pour the liquid from the cup back into the pan, put the napkins or paper towels and coffee grounds back on top of the cup, and repeat the procedure. It shouldn't take more than two times to make a strong enough cup of coffee. This may seem like a long and tedious procedure, but you'll get your cup of coffee, and you'll probably feel rather proud of yourself!

John Gibb is the owner of coffee making sources , For more information on how to make coffee check out http://www.cofeemaking-sources.info

coffee making sources http://www.cofeemaking-sources.info

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

braun coffee the history of braun and their dripolator coffee maker

Designed for commercial use, it changed the way people looked at making a cup of coffee. In 1963, the Braun company had come out with one of the world's first commercially available dripolator machines, the Braun Coffee Maker. Later versions of percolator machines were electric, and could be plugged directly into a socket. From home to commercial use, perking coffee was the only way to get a cup of joe. Before the Braun Coffee Maker, people used a stove top percolator machine to brew their coffee. From there, one simply had to plug in the machine and turn it on. Instead of having to perk coffee, people were able to fill up a separate water reservoir, put coffee grounds into a filter and put the filter into a basket. The difference between percolators and dripolators is what changed the world of coffee as Americans knew it. The water would then heat up in the water reservoir and drip onto the freshly ground coffee. As it made the journey through the grounds, the water would turn into coffee, much like one would brew a cup of tea. By the time the hot water made its way through the coffee grounds and dripped into the empty pot below, it was a perfect cup of coffee. The filter kept the grounds from mixing in with the actual coffee, and a new way to complete a daily task was born. While the Braun Coffee Maker was the first one on the market for commercial use, it wasn't the first one to hit the kitchen counter of the average American citizen. Pitched by former baseball player Joe DiMaggio, the machine became wildly popular in the 1970s and 1980s. Coffee was on store shelves. In 1972, Mr. Coffee did for home use. What the Braun Coffee Maker did for commercial use, Mr.

Designed for commercial use, it changed the way people looked at making a cup of coffee. In 1963, the Braun company had come out with one of the world's first commercially available dripolator machines, the Braun Coffee Maker.Later versions of percolator machines were electric, and could be plugged directly into a socket. From home to commercial use, perking coffee was the only way to get a cup of joe. Before the Braun Coffee Maker, people used a stove top percolator machine to brew their coffee.From there, one simply had to plug in the machine and turn it on. Instead of having to perk coffee, people were able to fill up a separate water reservoir, put coffee grounds into a filter and put the filter into a basket. The difference between percolators and dripolators is what changed the world of coffee as Americans knew it.Pitched by former baseball player Joe DiMaggio, the machine became wildly popular in the 1970s and 1980s. Coffee was on store shelves. In 1972, Mr. Coffee did for home use. What the Braun Coffee Maker did for commercial use, Mr.

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