After all these years of suffering with the electric coffee makers such as Mr. Coffee and all other brands which make lukewarm nasty tasting coffee disbursed by these marvels of technology, I finally decided to get a non-electric percolator which makes coffee the old-fashioned way of 50 years ago.
I chose the Farberware Yosemite Percolator which I got online at amazon.com for $19.99. The coffee which it brews is actually hot and actually has a taste. It works best with cheap coffee. I prefer Chase & Sanborn but I can't find that brand in Texas. So I use Master Chef which I can buy at Wally World in Boerne. 33 ounces for $5.35. Master Chef is roasted by Massimo Zanetti (which also roasts Chase & Sanborn).
The Yosemite Percolator is a 10 cup percolator.
We have an electric range. After many attempts at how to make the perfect pot of coffee, here is my routine:
For a full pot of coffee, use 4 giant scoops of cheapo coffee.
Our electric range has a burner setting from 0 to 10. I select the 5 setting and perc for 25 minutes. Then I select the 2 setting and perc for 8 minutes. Then I turn off the range and let the coffee set on an unused cold burner for another 2.7 minutes.
The coffee is then ready to drink.
Pour as many cups as you wish.
Put excess coffee in a thermal carafe to keep the remaining coffee scalding hot.
I tried in vain to find a stainless steel vacuum coffee pot but could find none. So I selected the Yosemite percolator instead. I am pleased as punch with my purchase.
To all you coffee freaks, I recommend this Yosemite percolator.
As an aside, I suggest you also buy the glass percolator top for a few dollars on Amazon.com to replace the yukko plastic top which comes standard with the Yosemite.
Anyone else out there frustated with lukewarm foul tasting coffee? Ditch those Mr Coffee and related copy cat devices and go back to the future with a percolator!!!!
Have a swell day,
The Coffeemeister
|
Well, what'cha gonna do? ?One day you are not to drink more than one cup and now it's good for you. ?All through it I continued to drink my two mugs per day and doing okay. Guess I got used to more conveniences. ?Perking on the stove top is not my style. Our's is a Hamilton Beach that has a thermal pot so it stays warm but doesn't get burnt and overheated (yuk!) from a hotplate. Also grind my beans each day. ?So I'm a snob - but, hey, to each their own. ?
"Nothing is ever lost by courtesy. It is the cheapest of pleasures, costs nothing, and conveys much." ?Erastus Wiman
HAVE A GREAT DAY!
KEITH GOUDY 512-590-2832
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
On May 25, 2012, at 1:28 PM, jhdouglas59 wrote:
?
After all these years of suffering with the electric coffee makers
such as Mr. Coffee and all other brands which make lukewarm nasty
tasting coffee disbursed by these marvels of technology, I finally
decided to get a non-electric percolator which makes coffee the
old-fashioned way of 50 years ago.
I chose the Farberware Yosemite Percolator which I got online at
for $19.99. The coffee which it brews is actually hot
and actually has a taste. It works best with cheap coffee. I prefer
Chase & Sanborn but I can't find that brand in Texas. So I use
Master Chef which I can buy at Wally World in Boerne. 33 ounces
for $5.35. Master Chef is roasted by Massimo Zanetti (which also
roasts Chase & Sanborn).
The Yosemite Percolator is a 10 cup percolator.
We have an electric range. After many attempts at how to make the
perfect pot of coffee, here is my routine:
For a full pot of coffee, use 4 giant scoops of cheapo coffee.
Our electric range has a burner setting from 0 to 10.
I select the 5 setting and perc for 25 minutes.
Then I select the 2 setting and perc for 8 minutes.
Then I turn off the range and let the coffee set on an
unused cold burner for another 2.7 minutes.
The coffee is then ready to drink.
Pour as many cups as you wish.
Put excess coffee in a thermal carafe to keep the remaining
coffee scalding hot.
I tried in vain to find a stainless steel vacuum coffee pot
but could find none. So I selected the Yosemite percolator
instead. I am pleased as punch with my purchase.
To all you coffee freaks, I recommend this Yosemite percolator.
As an aside, I suggest you also buy the glass percolator top
for a few dollars on to replace the yukko plastic
top which comes standard with the Yosemite.
Anyone else out there frustated with lukewarm foul tasting
coffee? Ditch those Mr Coffee and related copy cat devices
and go back to the future with a percolator!!!!
Have a swell day,
The Coffeemeister
|
OH MY LOL I am so glad to be a tea drinker but I will pass on the info to my guy who insists on only coffee beans and dark roast. ? summer is coming, what are you doing to stay cool? ?not drinking coffee are you? ?Lots of sweet tea here in GA but mine is with Stevia.....
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
On Fri, May 25, 2012 at 2:28 PM, jhdouglas59 <jhdouglas59@...> wrote:
?
After all these years of suffering with the electric coffee makers
such as Mr. Coffee and all other brands which make lukewarm nasty
tasting coffee disbursed by these marvels of technology, I finally
decided to get a non-electric percolator which makes coffee the
old-fashioned way of 50 years ago.
I chose the Farberware Yosemite Percolator which I got online at
for $19.99. The coffee which it brews is actually hot
and actually has a taste. It works best with cheap coffee. I prefer
Chase & Sanborn but I can't find that brand in Texas. So I use
Master Chef which I can buy at Wally World in Boerne. 33 ounces
for $5.35. Master Chef is roasted by Massimo Zanetti (which also
roasts Chase & Sanborn).
The Yosemite Percolator is a 10 cup percolator.
We have an electric range. After many attempts at how to make the
perfect pot of coffee, here is my routine:
For a full pot of coffee, use 4 giant scoops of cheapo coffee.
Our electric range has a burner setting from 0 to 10.
I select the 5 setting and perc for 25 minutes.
Then I select the 2 setting and perc for 8 minutes.
Then I turn off the range and let the coffee set on an
unused cold burner for another 2.7 minutes.
The coffee is then ready to drink.
Pour as many cups as you wish.
Put excess coffee in a thermal carafe to keep the remaining
coffee scalding hot.
I tried in vain to find a stainless steel vacuum coffee pot
but could find none. So I selected the Yosemite percolator
instead. I am pleased as punch with my purchase.
To all you coffee freaks, I recommend this Yosemite percolator.
As an aside, I suggest you also buy the glass percolator top
for a few dollars on Amazon.com to replace the yukko plastic
top which comes standard with the Yosemite.
Anyone else out there frustated with lukewarm foul tasting
coffee? Ditch those Mr Coffee and related copy cat devices
and go back to the future with a percolator!!!!
Have a swell day,
The Coffeemeister
|
Dear Coffeemeister,
I'm so glad you keep coming up with things to keep us laughing, and also to keep this site alive.
As for the coffee, well since I am the only coffee drinker in this house, we broke down and bought a Keurig. Yes it is a little pricey to drink coffee that way but I limit myself to one K-cup a day and I get two medium cups of coffee from it.
I will admit that the second cup is a little weak, but what the heck, when I compare it with the lukewarm decaf they tried to give me in the hospital, the second cup from my K-cup (oh! sounds like a bra size!) is like Ben and Jerry's vs. DQ!
Stay healthy everyone.
Paul
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
--- In dalton59@..., patricia lee <pjlee1117@...> wrote: OH MY LOL I am so glad to be a tea drinker but I will pass on the info to my guy who insists on only coffee beans and dark roast. summer is coming, what are you doing to stay cool? not drinking coffee are you? Lots of sweet tea here in GA but mine is with Stevia.....
On Fri, May 25, 2012 at 2:28 PM, jhdouglas59 <jhdouglas59@...> wrote:
**
After all these years of suffering with the electric coffee makers such as Mr. Coffee and all other brands which make lukewarm nasty tasting coffee disbursed by these marvels of technology, I finally decided to get a non-electric percolator which makes coffee the old-fashioned way of 50 years ago.
I chose the Farberware Yosemite Percolator which I got online at amazon.com for $19.99. The coffee which it brews is actually hot and actually has a taste. It works best with cheap coffee. I prefer Chase & Sanborn but I can't find that brand in Texas. So I use Master Chef which I can buy at Wally World in Boerne. 33 ounces for $5.35. Master Chef is roasted by Massimo Zanetti (which also roasts Chase & Sanborn).
The Yosemite Percolator is a 10 cup percolator.
We have an electric range. After many attempts at how to make the perfect pot of coffee, here is my routine:
For a full pot of coffee, use 4 giant scoops of cheapo coffee.
Our electric range has a burner setting from 0 to 10. I select the 5 setting and perc for 25 minutes. Then I select the 2 setting and perc for 8 minutes. Then I turn off the range and let the coffee set on an unused cold burner for another 2.7 minutes.
The coffee is then ready to drink.
Pour as many cups as you wish.
Put excess coffee in a thermal carafe to keep the remaining coffee scalding hot.
I tried in vain to find a stainless steel vacuum coffee pot but could find none. So I selected the Yosemite percolator instead. I am pleased as punch with my purchase.
To all you coffee freaks, I recommend this Yosemite percolator.
As an aside, I suggest you also buy the glass percolator top for a few dollars on Amazon.com to replace the yukko plastic top which comes standard with the Yosemite.
Anyone else out there frustated with lukewarm foul tasting coffee? Ditch those Mr Coffee and related copy cat devices and go back to the future with a percolator!!!!
Have a swell day,
The Coffeemeister
|
I’m with you Keith.? I still use a Mr. Coffee style, a Black &
Decker, that makes decent coffee.? I too grind my beans each day.
?
My first coffee make, though, back in graduate school, was a Chemex where
you used filter paper to contain the ground coffee and you heated water and
poured it through the coffee in the filter paper.? The coffee was good but
it required a lot of effort to make it.
?
Chuck
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
Sent: Friday, May 25, 2012 2:16 PM
Subject: Re: [dalton59] Retro Coffee-Finally a pot of coffee with
taste
?
?
Well, what'cha gonna do?? One day you are not to drink more than one cup
and now it's good for you.? All through it I continued to drink my two mugs
per day and doing okay.
Guess I got used to more conveniences.? Perking on the stove top is
not my style. Our's is a Hamilton Beach that has a thermal pot so it stays warm
but doesn't get burnt and overheated (yuk!) from a hotplate. Also grind my beans
each day.? So I'm a snob - but, hey, to each their own.?
"Nothing is ever lost by courtesy. It is the cheapest of pleasures, costs
nothing, and conveys much."? Erastus Wiman
?
HAVE A GREAT DAY!
?
KEITH GOUDY
512-590-2832
?
?
On May 25, 2012, at 1:28 PM, jhdouglas59 wrote:
?
After all these years of suffering with the electric coffee makers such
as Mr. Coffee and all other brands which make lukewarm nasty tasting coffee
disbursed by these marvels of technology, I finally decided to get a
non-electric percolator which makes coffee the old-fashioned way of 50
years ago.
I chose the Farberware Yosemite Percolator which I got
online at for $19.99. The coffee
which it brews is actually hot and actually has a taste. It works best with
cheap coffee. I prefer Chase & Sanborn but I can't find that brand in
Texas. So I use Master Chef which I can buy at Wally World in Boerne. 33
ounces for $5.35. Master Chef is roasted by Massimo Zanetti (which
also roasts Chase & Sanborn).
The Yosemite Percolator is a 10
cup percolator.
We have an electric range. After many attempts at how
to make the perfect pot of coffee, here is my routine:
For a full
pot of coffee, use 4 giant scoops of cheapo coffee.
Our electric range
has a burner setting from 0 to 10. I select the 5 setting and perc for 25
minutes. Then I select the 2 setting and perc for 8 minutes. Then I turn
off the range and let the coffee set on an unused cold burner for another
2.7 minutes.
The coffee is then ready to drink.
Pour as many
cups as you wish.
Put excess coffee in a thermal carafe to keep the
remaining coffee scalding hot.
I tried in vain to find a stainless
steel vacuum coffee pot but could find none. So I selected the Yosemite
percolator instead. I am pleased as punch with my purchase.
To all
you coffee freaks, I recommend this Yosemite percolator.
As an aside, I
suggest you also buy the glass percolator top for a few dollars on to replace the yukko plastic top
which comes standard with the Yosemite.
Anyone else out there frustated
with lukewarm foul tasting coffee? Ditch those Mr Coffee and related copy
cat devices and go back to the future with a percolator!!!!
Have a
swell day,
The Coffeemeister
?
|
I used to grind my own coffee beans but when the cost went from $6.99 to $14.99 at Costco for 2 pounds I protested the price increase and went back to el cheapo pre-ground coffee. I have had 2 grind and brew coffeemakers. One was a Cuisinart which croaked after about 13.14798 months just past the 12 month warranty. The other grind and brew was a Mr. Coffee maker which still kind of works but is suffering from vinegar overdose from trying to clean the grinding part with too much vinegar which caused the plastic grinding chamber to partially dissolve and is nasty looking. It awaits donation to the Salvation Army which actually fixes things and gives the refurbished stuff to needy souls.
All of these electric dripola coffeemakers get clogged up from our heart healthy calcium well water. The vinegar cleaning routine has gotten old to me and not worth the effort to make lukewarm no taste coffee.
With the Yosemite stainless steel percolator stovetop type, all it takes is a short 8.254987622 minutes daily to clean up the coffee grounds and residue with soapy water and a scratchfree dish sponge. No more vinegar and monthly vinegar headaches from a cleaning process designed for sadists.
My Yosemite makes coffee that actually has a coffee brewing smell and a truly hot cup of coffee with taste with only a brief 33 minutes of brewing time. Great for those in a hurry.
The coffee probably tastes like it used to back in the olden days when Peggy Wood of "I Remember Mama" brewed coffee incessantly. She always had that goofy smile on her face like she was having an overdose of caffeine. Or maybe she just meant well. The world is full of people who mean well (but have a problem in actually truly meaning well). Or maybe she was just "nice". Remember my motto that "Basically people are nice in isolated groups of one or less".
That was probably the best tv show other than Bishop Fulton Sheen.
Of course there were other great shows like Pinky Lee and Mr. Wizard starring Don Herbert.
And the best show of all was Ernie Kovacs and wife Edie Adams. Who could ever forget the Nairobi Trio? Now that was great tv.
And the best song back in the olden days had to be Peggy Lee and her rendition of "Is That All Their Is?". I think that song actually was famous in the late 60's but is still true today.
I often think of that song when I see historic places such as The Alamo in San Antonio. I look at that place and I say to myself "Is That All There Is?". That kind of fits most of the grand places that once you see it you have the feeling that there must be more to the hype than what you actually see and encounter.
A word of warning. My next topic will concern the "Rule of 7".
Can anyone out there postulate what the topic means?
Have a safe and sound Memorial Day and pleae remember the meaning of this national holiday.
The Elcheapomeister
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
--- In dalton59@..., "Chuck Meier" <charlesmeier01@...> wrote: I'm with you Keith. I still use a Mr. Coffee style, a Black & Decker, that makes decent coffee. I too grind my beans each day.
My first coffee make, though, back in graduate school, was a Chemex where you used filter paper to contain the ground coffee and you heated water and poured it through the coffee in the filter paper. The coffee was good but it required a lot of effort to make it.
Chuck
From: Keith Goudy Sent: Friday, May 25, 2012 2:16 PM To: dalton59@... Subject: Re: [dalton59] Retro Coffee-Finally a pot of coffee with taste
Well, what'cha gonna do? One day you are not to drink more than one cup and now it's good for you. All through it I continued to drink my two mugs per day and doing okay.
Guess I got used to more conveniences. Perking on the stove top is not my style. Our's is a Hamilton Beach that has a thermal pot so it stays warm but doesn't get burnt and overheated (yuk!) from a hotplate. Also grind my beans each day. So I'm a snob - but, hey, to each their own.
"Nothing is ever lost by courtesy. It is the cheapest of pleasures, costs nothing, and conveys much." Erastus Wiman
HAVE A GREAT DAY!
KEITH GOUDY keith.goudy@... 512-590-2832
On May 25, 2012, at 1:28 PM, jhdouglas59 wrote:
After all these years of suffering with the electric coffee makers such as Mr. Coffee and all other brands which make lukewarm nasty tasting coffee disbursed by these marvels of technology, I finally decided to get a non-electric percolator which makes coffee the old-fashioned way of 50 years ago.
I chose the Farberware Yosemite Percolator which I got online at amazon.com for $19.99. The coffee which it brews is actually hot and actually has a taste. It works best with cheap coffee. I prefer Chase & Sanborn but I can't find that brand in Texas. So I use Master Chef which I can buy at Wally World in Boerne. 33 ounces for $5.35. Master Chef is roasted by Massimo Zanetti (which also roasts Chase & Sanborn).
The Yosemite Percolator is a 10 cup percolator.
We have an electric range. After many attempts at how to make the perfect pot of coffee, here is my routine:
For a full pot of coffee, use 4 giant scoops of cheapo coffee.
Our electric range has a burner setting from 0 to 10. I select the 5 setting and perc for 25 minutes. Then I select the 2 setting and perc for 8 minutes. Then I turn off the range and let the coffee set on an unused cold burner for another 2.7 minutes.
The coffee is then ready to drink.
Pour as many cups as you wish.
Put excess coffee in a thermal carafe to keep the remaining coffee scalding hot.
I tried in vain to find a stainless steel vacuum coffee pot but could find none. So I selected the Yosemite percolator instead. I am pleased as punch with my purchase.
To all you coffee freaks, I recommend this Yosemite percolator.
As an aside, I suggest you also buy the glass percolator top for a few dollars on Amazon.com to replace the yukko plastic top which comes standard with the Yosemite.
Anyone else out there frustated with lukewarm foul tasting coffee? Ditch those Mr Coffee and related copy cat devices and go back to the future with a percolator!!!!
Have a swell day,
The Coffeemeister
|
Is the Rule of 7 the Rule of 9 minus 2?
?
Does it have something to do with your timing of coffee stuff to 5 or 9
places?
?
Wondering about precision.
?
Chuck
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
Sent: Monday, May 28, 2012 12:56 PM
Subject: [dalton59] Re: Retro Coffee-Finally a pot of coffee with
taste
?
?
I used to grind my own coffee beans but when the cost went from $6.99 to
$14.99 at Costco for 2 pounds I protested the price increase and went back to el
cheapo pre-ground coffee. I have had 2 grind and brew coffeemakers. One was a
Cuisinart which croaked after about 13.14798 months just past the 12 month
warranty. The other grind and brew was a Mr. Coffee maker which still kind
of works but is suffering from vinegar overdose from trying to clean the
grinding part with too much vinegar which caused the plastic grinding
chamber to partially dissolve and is nasty looking. It awaits donation to
the Salvation Army which actually fixes things and gives the refurbished
stuff to needy souls.
All of these electric dripola coffeemakers get
clogged up from our heart healthy calcium well water. The vinegar cleaning
routine has gotten old to me and not worth the effort to make lukewarm no
taste coffee.
With the Yosemite stainless steel percolator stovetop type,
all it takes is a short 8.254987622 minutes daily to clean up the
coffee grounds and residue with soapy water and a scratchfree dish
sponge. No more vinegar and monthly vinegar headaches from a
cleaning process designed for sadists.
My Yosemite makes coffee that
actually has a coffee brewing smell and a truly hot cup of coffee with taste
with only a brief 33 minutes of brewing time. Great for those in a
hurry.
The coffee probably tastes like it used to back in the olden
days when Peggy Wood of "I Remember Mama" brewed coffee incessantly. She
always had that goofy smile on her face like she was having an overdose of
caffeine. Or maybe she just meant well. The world is full of people who mean
well (but have a problem in actually truly meaning well). Or maybe she was
just "nice". Remember my motto that "Basically people are nice in isolated
groups of one or less".
That was probably the best tv show other than
Bishop Fulton Sheen.
Of course there were other great shows like Pinky
Lee and Mr. Wizard starring Don Herbert.
And the best show of all was
Ernie Kovacs and wife Edie Adams. Who could ever forget the Nairobi Trio? Now
that was great tv.
And the best song back in the olden days had to be
Peggy Lee and her rendition of "Is That All Their Is?". I think that
song actually was famous in the late 60's but is still true today.
I
often think of that song when I see historic places such as The Alamo in San
Antonio. I look at that place and I say to myself "Is That All There Is?".
That kind of fits most of the grand places that once you see it you have the
feeling that there must be more to the hype than what you actually see and
encounter.
A word of warning. My next topic will concern the "Rule of
7".
Can anyone out there postulate what the topic means?
Have a
safe and sound Memorial Day and pleae remember the meaning of this national
holiday.
The Elcheapomeister
--- In mailto:dalton59%40yahoogroups.com,
"Chuck Meier" wrote: > > I'm with you
Keith. I still use a Mr. Coffee style, a Black & Decker, that makes decent
coffee. I too grind my beans each day. > > My first coffee make,
though, back in graduate school, was a Chemex where you used filter paper to
contain the ground coffee and you heated water and poured it through the coffee
in the filter paper. The coffee was good but it required a lot of effort to make
it. > > Chuck > > From: Keith Goudy > Sent:
Friday, May 25, 2012 2:16 PM > To: mailto:dalton59%40yahoogroups.com
> Subject: Re: [dalton59] Retro Coffee-Finally a pot of coffee with
taste > > > Well, what'cha gonna do? One day you are not to
drink more than one cup and now it's good for you. All through it I continued to
drink my two mugs per day and doing okay. > > Guess I got used to
more conveniences. Perking on the stove top is not my style. Our's is a Hamilton
Beach that has a thermal pot so it stays warm but doesn't get burnt and
overheated (yuk!) from a hotplate. Also grind my beans each day. So I'm a snob -
but, hey, to each their own. > > > > >
"Nothing is ever lost by courtesy. It is the cheapest of pleasures, costs
nothing, and conveys much." Erastus Wiman > > HAVE A GREAT
DAY! > > KEITH GOUDY > keith.goudy@... >
512-590-2832 > > > > > > >
> > > > > On May 25, 2012, at 1:28 PM,
jhdouglas59 wrote: > > > > After all these years of
suffering with the electric coffee makers > such as Mr. Coffee and all
other brands which make lukewarm nasty > tasting coffee disbursed by these
marvels of technology, I finally > decided to get a non-electric
percolator which makes coffee the > old-fashioned way of 50 years
ago. > > I chose the Farberware Yosemite Percolator which I got
online at > amazon.com for $19.99. The coffee which it brews is actually
hot > and actually has a taste. It works best with cheap coffee. I
prefer > Chase & Sanborn but I can't find that brand in Texas. So I
use > Master Chef which I can buy at Wally World in Boerne. 33
ounces > for $5.35. Master Chef is roasted by Massimo Zanetti (which
also > roasts Chase & Sanborn). > > The Yosemite
Percolator is a 10 cup percolator. > > We have an electric range.
After many attempts at how to make the > perfect pot of coffee, here is my
routine: > > For a full pot of coffee, use 4 giant scoops of cheapo
coffee. > > Our electric range has a burner setting from 0 to
10. > I select the 5 setting and perc for 25 minutes. > Then I
select the 2 setting and perc for 8 minutes. > Then I turn off the range
and let the coffee set on an > unused cold burner for another 2.7
minutes. > > The coffee is then ready to drink. > >
Pour as many cups as you wish. > > Put excess coffee in a thermal
carafe to keep the remaining > coffee scalding hot. > > I
tried in vain to find a stainless steel vacuum coffee pot > but could find
none. So I selected the Yosemite percolator > instead. I am pleased as
punch with my purchase. > > To all you coffee freaks, I recommend
this Yosemite percolator. > > As an aside, I suggest you also buy
the glass percolator top > for a few dollars on Amazon.com to replace the
yukko plastic > top which comes standard with the Yosemite. >
> Anyone else out there frustated with lukewarm foul tasting >
coffee? Ditch those Mr Coffee and related copy cat devices > and go back
to the future with a percolator!!!! > > Have a swell day, >
> The Coffeemeister >
|
Oh, that is a card term in Bridge. Count the cards in you hand. If they equal seven, then you are in the wrong game. No, that's not it. It has to do with the number of times one hit's their finger when pounding in a nail after you calculate your age and divide by seven and subtract the two if you want to. I also heard that it takes seven time to tell something to somebody so this is only three and nobody will remember it.
"Nothing is ever lost by courtesy. It is the cheapest of pleasures, costs nothing, and conveys much." ?Erastus Wiman
HAVE A GREAT DAY!
KEITH GOUDY 512-590-2832
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
On May 28, 2012, at 2:56 PM, jhdouglas59 wrote:
?
I used to grind my own coffee beans but when the cost went from
$6.99 to $14.99 at Costco for 2 pounds I protested the price increase and went back to el cheapo pre-ground coffee. I have had 2 grind and
brew coffeemakers. One was a Cuisinart which croaked after about
13.14798 months just past the 12 month warranty. The other grind
and brew was a Mr. Coffee maker which still kind of works but
is suffering from vinegar overdose from trying to clean the grinding
part with too much vinegar which caused the plastic grinding chamber
to partially dissolve and is nasty looking. It awaits donation
to the Salvation Army which actually fixes things and gives the
refurbished stuff to needy souls.
All of these electric dripola coffeemakers get clogged up from
our heart healthy calcium well water. The vinegar cleaning routine
has gotten old to me and not worth the effort to make lukewarm
no taste coffee.
With the Yosemite stainless steel percolator stovetop type, all
it takes is a short 8.254987622 minutes daily to clean up the coffee
grounds and residue with soapy water and a scratchfree dish sponge.
No more vinegar and monthly vinegar headaches from a cleaning
process designed for sadists.
My Yosemite makes coffee that actually has a coffee brewing smell
and a truly hot cup of coffee with taste with only a brief 33 minutes
of brewing time. Great for those in a hurry.
The coffee probably tastes like it used to back in the olden days
when Peggy Wood of "I Remember Mama" brewed coffee incessantly.
She always had that goofy smile on her face like she was having
an overdose of caffeine. Or maybe she just meant well. The world
is full of people who mean well (but have a problem in actually
truly meaning well). Or maybe she was just "nice". Remember my motto
that "Basically people are nice in isolated groups of one or less".
That was probably the best tv show other than Bishop Fulton Sheen.
Of course there were other great shows like Pinky Lee and Mr. Wizard
starring Don Herbert.
And the best show of all was Ernie Kovacs and wife Edie Adams.
Who could ever forget the Nairobi Trio? Now that was great tv.
And the best song back in the olden days had to be Peggy Lee
and her rendition of "Is That All Their Is?". I think that song
actually was famous in the late 60's but is still true today.
I often think of that song when I see historic places such as
The Alamo in San Antonio. I look at that place and I say
to myself "Is That All There Is?". That kind of fits most
of the grand places that once you see it you have the feeling
that there must be more to the hype than what you actually
see and encounter.
A word of warning. My next topic will concern the "Rule of 7".
Can anyone out there postulate what the topic means?
Have a safe and sound Memorial Day and pleae remember the
meaning of this national holiday.
The Elcheapomeister
--- In dalton59@..., "Chuck Meier" wrote:
>
> I'm with you Keith. I still use a Mr. Coffee style, a Black & Decker, that makes decent coffee. I too grind my beans each day.
>
> My first coffee make, though, back in graduate school, was a Chemex where you used filter paper to contain the ground coffee and you heated water and poured it through the coffee in the filter paper. The coffee was good but it required a lot of effort to make it.
>
> Chuck
>
> From: Keith Goudy
> Sent: Friday, May 25, 2012 2:16 PM
> To: dalton59@...
> Subject: Re: [dalton59] Retro Coffee-Finally a pot of coffee with taste
>
>
> Well, what'cha gonna do? One day you are not to drink more than one cup and now it's good for you. All through it I continued to drink my two mugs per day and doing okay.
>
> Guess I got used to more conveniences. Perking on the stove top is not my style. Our's is a Hamilton Beach that has a thermal pot so it stays warm but doesn't get burnt and overheated (yuk!) from a hotplate. Also grind my beans each day. So I'm a snob - but, hey, to each their own.
>
>
>
>
> "Nothing is ever lost by courtesy. It is the cheapest of pleasures, costs nothing, and conveys much." Erastus Wiman
>
> HAVE A GREAT DAY!
>
> KEITH GOUDY
> keith.goudy@...
> 512-590-2832
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On May 25, 2012, at 1:28 PM, jhdouglas59 wrote:
>
>
>
> After all these years of suffering with the electric coffee makers
> such as Mr. Coffee and all other brands which make lukewarm nasty
> tasting coffee disbursed by these marvels of technology, I finally
> decided to get a non-electric percolator which makes coffee the
> old-fashioned way of 50 years ago.
>
> I chose the Farberware Yosemite Percolator which I got online at
> for $19.99. The coffee which it brews is actually hot
> and actually has a taste. It works best with cheap coffee. I prefer
> Chase & Sanborn but I can't find that brand in Texas. So I use
> Master Chef which I can buy at Wally World in Boerne. 33 ounces
> for $5.35. Master Chef is roasted by Massimo Zanetti (which also
> roasts Chase & Sanborn).
>
> The Yosemite Percolator is a 10 cup percolator.
>
> We have an electric range. After many attempts at how to make the
> perfect pot of coffee, here is my routine:
>
> For a full pot of coffee, use 4 giant scoops of cheapo coffee.
>
> Our electric range has a burner setting from 0 to 10.
> I select the 5 setting and perc for 25 minutes.
> Then I select the 2 setting and perc for 8 minutes.
> Then I turn off the range and let the coffee set on an
> unused cold burner for another 2.7 minutes.
>
> The coffee is then ready to drink.
>
> Pour as many cups as you wish.
>
> Put excess coffee in a thermal carafe to keep the remaining
> coffee scalding hot.
>
> I tried in vain to find a stainless steel vacuum coffee pot
> but could find none. So I selected the Yosemite percolator
> instead. I am pleased as punch with my purchase.
>
> To all you coffee freaks, I recommend this Yosemite percolator.
>
> As an aside, I suggest you also buy the glass percolator top
> for a few dollars on to replace the yukko plastic
> top which comes standard with the Yosemite.
>
> Anyone else out there frustated with lukewarm foul tasting
> coffee? Ditch those Mr Coffee and related copy cat devices
> and go back to the future with a percolator!!!!
>
> Have a swell day,
>
> The Coffeemeister
>
|
Chuck:
Close but no cigar.
I will disclose the answer in the near future.
Juan
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
--- In dalton59@..., "Chuck Meier" <charlesmeier01@...> wrote: Is the Rule of 7 the Rule of 9 minus 2?
Does it have something to do with your timing of coffee stuff to 5 or 9 places?
Wondering about precision.
Chuck
From: jhdouglas59 Sent: Monday, May 28, 2012 12:56 PM To: dalton59@... Subject: [dalton59] Re: Retro Coffee-Finally a pot of coffee with taste
I used to grind my own coffee beans but when the cost went from $6.99 to $14.99 at Costco for 2 pounds I protested the price increase and went back to el cheapo pre-ground coffee. I have had 2 grind and brew coffeemakers. One was a Cuisinart which croaked after about 13.14798 months just past the 12 month warranty. The other grind and brew was a Mr. Coffee maker which still kind of works but is suffering from vinegar overdose from trying to clean the grinding part with too much vinegar which caused the plastic grinding chamber to partially dissolve and is nasty looking. It awaits donation to the Salvation Army which actually fixes things and gives the refurbished stuff to needy souls.
All of these electric dripola coffeemakers get clogged up from our heart healthy calcium well water. The vinegar cleaning routine has gotten old to me and not worth the effort to make lukewarm no taste coffee.
With the Yosemite stainless steel percolator stovetop type, all it takes is a short 8.254987622 minutes daily to clean up the coffee grounds and residue with soapy water and a scratchfree dish sponge. No more vinegar and monthly vinegar headaches from a cleaning process designed for sadists.
My Yosemite makes coffee that actually has a coffee brewing smell and a truly hot cup of coffee with taste with only a brief 33 minutes of brewing time. Great for those in a hurry.
The coffee probably tastes like it used to back in the olden days when Peggy Wood of "I Remember Mama" brewed coffee incessantly. She always had that goofy smile on her face like she was having an overdose of caffeine. Or maybe she just meant well. The world is full of people who mean well (but have a problem in actually truly meaning well). Or maybe she was just "nice". Remember my motto that "Basically people are nice in isolated groups of one or less".
That was probably the best tv show other than Bishop Fulton Sheen.
Of course there were other great shows like Pinky Lee and Mr. Wizard starring Don Herbert.
And the best show of all was Ernie Kovacs and wife Edie Adams. Who could ever forget the Nairobi Trio? Now that was great tv.
And the best song back in the olden days had to be Peggy Lee and her rendition of "Is That All Their Is?". I think that song actually was famous in the late 60's but is still true today.
I often think of that song when I see historic places such as The Alamo in San Antonio. I look at that place and I say to myself "Is That All There Is?". That kind of fits most of the grand places that once you see it you have the feeling that there must be more to the hype than what you actually see and encounter.
A word of warning. My next topic will concern the "Rule of 7".
Can anyone out there postulate what the topic means?
Have a safe and sound Memorial Day and pleae remember the meaning of this national holiday.
The Elcheapomeister
--- In mailto:dalton59%40yahoogroups.com, "Chuck Meier" <charlesmeier01@> wrote:
I'm with you Keith. I still use a Mr. Coffee style, a Black & Decker, that makes decent coffee. I too grind my beans each day.
My first coffee make, though, back in graduate school, was a Chemex where you used filter paper to contain the ground coffee and you heated water and poured it through the coffee in the filter paper. The coffee was good but it required a lot of effort to make it.
Chuck
From: Keith Goudy Sent: Friday, May 25, 2012 2:16 PM To: mailto:dalton59%40yahoogroups.com Subject: Re: [dalton59] Retro Coffee-Finally a pot of coffee with taste
Well, what'cha gonna do? One day you are not to drink more than one cup and now it's good for you. All through it I continued to drink my two mugs per day and doing okay.
Guess I got used to more conveniences. Perking on the stove top is not my style. Our's is a Hamilton Beach that has a thermal pot so it stays warm but doesn't get burnt and overheated (yuk!) from a hotplate. Also grind my beans each day. So I'm a snob - but, hey, to each their own.
"Nothing is ever lost by courtesy. It is the cheapest of pleasures, costs nothing, and conveys much." Erastus Wiman
HAVE A GREAT DAY!
KEITH GOUDY keith.goudy@ 512-590-2832
On May 25, 2012, at 1:28 PM, jhdouglas59 wrote:
After all these years of suffering with the electric coffee makers such as Mr. Coffee and all other brands which make lukewarm nasty tasting coffee disbursed by these marvels of technology, I finally decided to get a non-electric percolator which makes coffee the old-fashioned way of 50 years ago.
I chose the Farberware Yosemite Percolator which I got online at amazon.com for $19.99. The coffee which it brews is actually hot and actually has a taste. It works best with cheap coffee. I prefer Chase & Sanborn but I can't find that brand in Texas. So I use Master Chef which I can buy at Wally World in Boerne. 33 ounces for $5.35. Master Chef is roasted by Massimo Zanetti (which also roasts Chase & Sanborn).
The Yosemite Percolator is a 10 cup percolator.
We have an electric range. After many attempts at how to make the perfect pot of coffee, here is my routine:
For a full pot of coffee, use 4 giant scoops of cheapo coffee.
Our electric range has a burner setting from 0 to 10. I select the 5 setting and perc for 25 minutes. Then I select the 2 setting and perc for 8 minutes. Then I turn off the range and let the coffee set on an unused cold burner for another 2.7 minutes.
The coffee is then ready to drink.
Pour as many cups as you wish.
Put excess coffee in a thermal carafe to keep the remaining coffee scalding hot.
I tried in vain to find a stainless steel vacuum coffee pot but could find none. So I selected the Yosemite percolator instead. I am pleased as punch with my purchase.
To all you coffee freaks, I recommend this Yosemite percolator.
As an aside, I suggest you also buy the glass percolator top for a few dollars on Amazon.com to replace the yukko plastic top which comes standard with the Yosemite.
Anyone else out there frustated with lukewarm foul tasting coffee? Ditch those Mr Coffee and related copy cat devices and go back to the future with a percolator!!!!
Have a swell day,
The Coffeemeister
|
Keith:
El wrongo answer but worthy of consideration.
I will disclose the answer soon.
Keep counting,
Juan
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
--- In dalton59@..., Keith Goudy <keith.goudy@...> wrote: Oh, that is a card term in Bridge. Count the cards in you hand. If they equal seven, then you are in the wrong game. No, that's not it. It has to do with the number of times one hit's their finger when pounding in a nail after you calculate your age and divide by seven and subtract the two if you want to. I also heard that it takes seven time to tell something to somebody so this is only three and nobody will remember it.
"Nothing is ever lost by courtesy. It is the cheapest of pleasures, costs nothing, and conveys much." Erastus Wiman
HAVE A GREAT DAY!
KEITH GOUDY keith.goudy@... 512-590-2832
On May 28, 2012, at 2:56 PM, jhdouglas59 wrote:
I used to grind my own coffee beans but when the cost went from $6.99 to $14.99 at Costco for 2 pounds I protested the price increase and went back to el cheapo pre-ground coffee. I have had 2 grind and brew coffeemakers. One was a Cuisinart which croaked after about 13.14798 months just past the 12 month warranty. The other grind and brew was a Mr. Coffee maker which still kind of works but is suffering from vinegar overdose from trying to clean the grinding part with too much vinegar which caused the plastic grinding chamber to partially dissolve and is nasty looking. It awaits donation to the Salvation Army which actually fixes things and gives the refurbished stuff to needy souls.
All of these electric dripola coffeemakers get clogged up from our heart healthy calcium well water. The vinegar cleaning routine has gotten old to me and not worth the effort to make lukewarm no taste coffee.
With the Yosemite stainless steel percolator stovetop type, all it takes is a short 8.254987622 minutes daily to clean up the coffee grounds and residue with soapy water and a scratchfree dish sponge. No more vinegar and monthly vinegar headaches from a cleaning process designed for sadists.
My Yosemite makes coffee that actually has a coffee brewing smell and a truly hot cup of coffee with taste with only a brief 33 minutes of brewing time. Great for those in a hurry.
The coffee probably tastes like it used to back in the olden days when Peggy Wood of "I Remember Mama" brewed coffee incessantly. She always had that goofy smile on her face like she was having an overdose of caffeine. Or maybe she just meant well. The world is full of people who mean well (but have a problem in actually truly meaning well). Or maybe she was just "nice". Remember my motto that "Basically people are nice in isolated groups of one or less".
That was probably the best tv show other than Bishop Fulton Sheen.
Of course there were other great shows like Pinky Lee and Mr. Wizard starring Don Herbert.
And the best show of all was Ernie Kovacs and wife Edie Adams. Who could ever forget the Nairobi Trio? Now that was great tv.
And the best song back in the olden days had to be Peggy Lee and her rendition of "Is That All Their Is?". I think that song actually was famous in the late 60's but is still true today.
I often think of that song when I see historic places such as The Alamo in San Antonio. I look at that place and I say to myself "Is That All There Is?". That kind of fits most of the grand places that once you see it you have the feeling that there must be more to the hype than what you actually see and encounter.
A word of warning. My next topic will concern the "Rule of 7".
Can anyone out there postulate what the topic means?
Have a safe and sound Memorial Day and pleae remember the meaning of this national holiday.
The Elcheapomeister
--- In dalton59@..., "Chuck Meier" <charlesmeier01@> wrote:
I'm with you Keith. I still use a Mr. Coffee style, a Black & Decker, that makes decent coffee. I too grind my beans each day.
My first coffee make, though, back in graduate school, was a Chemex where you used filter paper to contain the ground coffee and you heated water and poured it through the coffee in the filter paper. The coffee was good but it required a lot of effort to make it.
Chuck
From: Keith Goudy Sent: Friday, May 25, 2012 2:16 PM To: dalton59@... Subject: Re: [dalton59] Retro Coffee-Finally a pot of coffee with taste
Well, what'cha gonna do? One day you are not to drink more than one cup and now it's good for you. All through it I continued to drink my two mugs per day and doing okay.
Guess I got used to more conveniences. Perking on the stove top is not my style. Our's is a Hamilton Beach that has a thermal pot so it stays warm but doesn't get burnt and overheated (yuk!) from a hotplate. Also grind my beans each day. So I'm a snob - but, hey, to each their own.
"Nothing is ever lost by courtesy. It is the cheapest of pleasures, costs nothing, and conveys much." Erastus Wiman
HAVE A GREAT DAY!
KEITH GOUDY keith.goudy@ 512-590-2832
On May 25, 2012, at 1:28 PM, jhdouglas59 wrote:
After all these years of suffering with the electric coffee makers such as Mr. Coffee and all other brands which make lukewarm nasty tasting coffee disbursed by these marvels of technology, I finally decided to get a non-electric percolator which makes coffee the old-fashioned way of 50 years ago.
I chose the Farberware Yosemite Percolator which I got online at amazon.com for $19.99. The coffee which it brews is actually hot and actually has a taste. It works best with cheap coffee. I prefer Chase & Sanborn but I can't find that brand in Texas. So I use Master Chef which I can buy at Wally World in Boerne. 33 ounces for $5.35. Master Chef is roasted by Massimo Zanetti (which also roasts Chase & Sanborn).
The Yosemite Percolator is a 10 cup percolator.
We have an electric range. After many attempts at how to make the perfect pot of coffee, here is my routine:
For a full pot of coffee, use 4 giant scoops of cheapo coffee.
Our electric range has a burner setting from 0 to 10. I select the 5 setting and perc for 25 minutes. Then I select the 2 setting and perc for 8 minutes. Then I turn off the range and let the coffee set on an unused cold burner for another 2.7 minutes.
The coffee is then ready to drink.
Pour as many cups as you wish.
Put excess coffee in a thermal carafe to keep the remaining coffee scalding hot.
I tried in vain to find a stainless steel vacuum coffee pot but could find none. So I selected the Yosemite percolator instead. I am pleased as punch with my purchase.
To all you coffee freaks, I recommend this Yosemite percolator.
As an aside, I suggest you also buy the glass percolator top for a few dollars on Amazon.com to replace the yukko plastic top which comes standard with the Yosemite.
Anyone else out there frustated with lukewarm foul tasting coffee? Ditch those Mr Coffee and related copy cat devices and go back to the future with a percolator!!!!
Have a swell day,
The Coffeemeister
|
John:
?
You gave me some good laughs again? especially about I Remember Mama--"an overdose of caffine."? That was one of my favorite shows and think it came on about 8 pm on Friday night???? Am I right? - I'm sure you would remember that too!? Fulton Sheen - you must have been hard up to watch that at your young age.
?
I think I sang the same Peggy Lee song when I saw the Alamo as well!? Keep up laughing John!
?
Anybody going to be in Dalton soon?? I'm flying in June 19th and there for 7-8 days.
?
Everyone have a great summer.? Temperatures here in Dallas are already too hot and have been for a long time.
?
Linda F.
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
From: jhdouglas59 To: dalton59@... Sent: Mon, May 28, 2012 2:56:49 PM Subject: [dalton59] Re: Retro Coffee-Finally a pot of coffee with taste ?
I used to grind my own coffee beans but when the cost went from $6.99 to $14.99 at Costco for 2 pounds I protested the price increase and went back to el cheapo pre-ground coffee. I have had 2 grind and brew coffeemakers. One was a Cuisinart which croaked after about 13.14798 months just past the 12 month warranty. The other grind and brew was a Mr. Coffee maker which still kind of works but is suffering from vinegar overdose from trying to clean the grinding part with too much vinegar which caused the plastic grinding chamber to partially dissolve and is nasty looking. It awaits donation to the Salvation Army which actually fixes things and gives the refurbished stuff to needy souls.
All of these electric dripola coffeemakers get clogged up from our heart healthy calcium well water. The vinegar cleaning routine has gotten old to me and not worth the effort to make lukewarm no taste coffee.
With the
Yosemite stainless steel percolator stovetop type, all it takes is a short 8.254987622 minutes daily to clean up the coffee grounds and residue with soapy water and a scratchfree dish sponge. No more vinegar and monthly vinegar headaches from a cleaning process designed for sadists.
My Yosemite makes coffee that actually has a coffee brewing smell and a truly hot cup of coffee with taste with only a brief 33 minutes of brewing time. Great for those in a hurry.
The coffee probably tastes like it used to back in the olden days when Peggy Wood of "I Remember Mama" brewed coffee incessantly. She always had that goofy smile on her face like she was having an overdose of caffeine. Or maybe she just meant well. The world is full of people who mean well (but have a problem in actually truly meaning well). Or maybe she was just "nice". Remember my motto that "Basically people are nice in isolated groups of one or
less".
That was probably the best tv show other than Bishop Fulton Sheen.
Of course there were other great shows like Pinky Lee and Mr. Wizard starring Don Herbert.
And the best show of all was Ernie Kovacs and wife Edie Adams. Who could ever forget the Nairobi Trio? Now that was great tv.
And the best song back in the olden days had to be Peggy Lee and her rendition of "Is That All Their Is?". I think that song actually was famous in the late 60's but is still true today.
I often think of that song when I see historic places such as The Alamo in San Antonio. I look at that place and I say to myself "Is That All There Is?". That kind of fits most of the grand places that once you see it you have the feeling that there must be more to the hype than what you actually see and encounter.
A word of warning. My next topic will concern the "Rule of 7".
Can anyone out there postulate
what the topic means?
Have a safe and sound Memorial Day and pleae remember the meaning of this national holiday.
The Elcheapomeister
--- In dalton59@..., "Chuck Meier" wrote: > > I'm with you Keith. I still use a Mr. Coffee style, a Black & Decker, that makes decent coffee. I too grind my beans each day. > > My first coffee make, though, back in graduate school, was a Chemex where you used filter paper to contain the ground coffee and you heated water and poured it through the coffee in the filter paper. The coffee was good but it required a lot of effort to make it. > > Chuck > > From: Keith Goudy > Sent: Friday, May 25, 2012 2:16 PM > To: dalton59@... > Subject: Re: [dalton59] Retro Coffee-Finally a pot of coffee with taste > > > Well, what'cha gonna do? One day you are not to drink more than one cup and now it's good for you. All through it I continued to drink my two mugs per day and doing okay. > > Guess I got used to more conveniences. Perking on the stove top is not my style. Our's is a Hamilton Beach that has a thermal pot so it stays warm but doesn't get burnt and overheated (yuk!) from a hotplate. Also grind my beans each day. So I'm a snob - but, hey, to each their own. > > > > > "Nothing is ever lost by courtesy. It is the cheapest of pleasures, costs nothing, and conveys much." Erastus Wiman > > HAVE A GREAT DAY! > > KEITH GOUDY > keith.goudy@... > 512-590-2832 > > >
> > > > > > > > > On May 25, 2012, at 1:28 PM, jhdouglas59 wrote: > > > > After all these years of suffering with the electric coffee makers > such as Mr. Coffee and all other brands which make lukewarm nasty > tasting coffee disbursed by these marvels of technology, I finally > decided to get a non-electric percolator which makes coffee the > old-fashioned way of 50 years ago. > > I chose the Farberware Yosemite Percolator which I got online at > amazon.com for $19.99. The coffee which it brews is actually hot > and actually has a taste. It works best with cheap coffee. I prefer > Chase & Sanborn but I can't find that brand in Texas. So I use > Master Chef which I can buy at Wally World in Boerne. 33 ounces > for $5.35. Master Chef is roasted by Massimo Zanetti (which also > roasts Chase
& Sanborn). > > The Yosemite Percolator is a 10 cup percolator. > > We have an electric range. After many attempts at how to make the > perfect pot of coffee, here is my routine: > > For a full pot of coffee, use 4 giant scoops of cheapo coffee. > > Our electric range has a burner setting from 0 to 10. > I select the 5 setting and perc for 25 minutes. > Then I select the 2 setting and perc for 8 minutes. > Then I turn off the range and let the coffee set on an > unused cold burner for another 2.7 minutes. > > The coffee is then ready to drink. > > Pour as many cups as you wish. > > Put excess coffee in a thermal carafe to keep the remaining > coffee scalding hot. > > I tried in vain to find a stainless steel vacuum coffee pot > but could find none. So I selected the Yosemite percolator > instead. I
am pleased as punch with my purchase. > > To all you coffee freaks, I recommend this Yosemite percolator. > > As an aside, I suggest you also buy the glass percolator top > for a few dollars on Amazon.com to replace the yukko plastic > top which comes standard with the Yosemite. > > Anyone else out there frustated with lukewarm foul tasting > coffee? Ditch those Mr Coffee and related copy cat devices > and go back to the future with a percolator!!!! > > Have a swell day, > > The Coffeemeister >
|
Linda,
I just came back from Dalton on Monday the 23rd.? I'm happy to report that the previous Friday night, the Dariette was alive with lots of people enjoying the "May summer night" just like old times.
Addie
?
?
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
From: Linda Freeland To: dalton59@... Sent: Tue, May 29, 2012 10:00:15 PM Subject: Re: [dalton59] Re: Retro Coffee-Finally a pot of coffee with taste ?
John:
?
You gave me some good laughs again? especially about I Remember Mama--"an overdose of caffine."? That was one of my favorite shows and think it came on about 8 pm on Friday night???? Am I right? - I'm sure you would remember that too!? Fulton Sheen - you must have been hard up to watch that at your young age.
?
I think I sang the same Peggy Lee song when I saw the Alamo as well!? Keep up laughing John!
?
Anybody going to be in Dalton soon?? I'm flying in June 19th and there for 7-8 days.
?
Everyone have a great summer.? Temperatures here in Dallas are already too hot and have been for a long time.
?
Linda F.
From: jhdouglas59 To: dalton59@... Sent: Mon, May 28, 2012 2:56:49 PM Subject: [dalton59] Re: Retro Coffee-Finally a pot of coffee with taste ?
I used to grind my own coffee beans but when the cost went from $6.99 to $14.99 at Costco for 2 pounds I protested the price increase and went back to el cheapo pre-ground coffee. I have had 2 grind and brew coffeemakers. One was a Cuisinart which croaked after about 13.14798 months just past the 12 month warranty. The other grind and brew was a Mr. Coffee maker which still kind of works but is suffering from vinegar overdose from trying to clean the grinding part with too much vinegar which caused the plastic grinding chamber to partially dissolve and is nasty looking. It awaits donation to the Salvation Army which actually fixes things and gives the refurbished stuff to needy souls.
All of these electric dripola coffeemakers get clogged up from our heart healthy calcium well water. The vinegar cleaning routine has gotten old to me and not worth the effort to make lukewarm no taste coffee.
With the
Yosemite stainless steel percolator stovetop type, all it takes is a short 8.254987622 minutes daily to clean up the coffee grounds and residue with soapy water and a scratchfree dish sponge. No more vinegar and monthly vinegar headaches from a cleaning process designed for sadists.
My Yosemite makes coffee that actually has a coffee brewing smell and a truly hot cup of coffee with taste with only a brief 33 minutes of brewing time. Great for those in a hurry.
The coffee probably tastes like it used to back in the olden days when Peggy Wood of "I Remember Mama" brewed coffee incessantly. She always had that goofy smile on her face like she was having an overdose of caffeine. Or maybe she just meant well. The world is full of people who mean well (but have a problem in actually truly meaning well). Or maybe she was just "nice". Remember my motto that "Basically people are nice in isolated groups of one or
less".
That was probably the best tv show other than Bishop Fulton Sheen.
Of course there were other great shows like Pinky Lee and Mr. Wizard starring Don Herbert.
And the best show of all was Ernie Kovacs and wife Edie Adams. Who could ever forget the Nairobi Trio? Now that was great tv.
And the best song back in the olden days had to be Peggy Lee and her rendition of "Is That All Their Is?". I think that song actually was famous in the late 60's but is still true today.
I often think of that song when I see historic places such as The Alamo in San Antonio. I look at that place and I say to myself "Is That All There Is?". That kind of fits most of the grand places that once you see it you have the feeling that there must be more to the hype than what you actually see and encounter.
A word of warning. My next topic will concern the "Rule of 7".
Can anyone out there postulate
what the topic means?
Have a safe and sound Memorial Day and pleae remember the meaning of this national holiday.
The Elcheapomeister
--- In dalton59@..., "Chuck Meier" wrote: > > I'm with you Keith. I still use a Mr. Coffee style, a Black & Decker, that makes decent coffee. I too grind my beans each day. > > My first coffee make, though, back in graduate school, was a Chemex where you used filter paper to contain the ground coffee and you heated water and poured it through the coffee in the filter paper. The coffee was good but it required a lot of effort to make it. > > Chuck > > From: Keith Goudy > Sent: Friday, May 25, 2012 2:16 PM > To: dalton59@... > Subject: Re: [dalton59] Retro Coffee-Finally a pot of coffee with taste > > > Well, what'cha gonna do? One day you are not to drink more than one cup and now it's good for you. All through it I continued to drink my two mugs per day and doing okay. > > Guess I got used to more conveniences. Perking on the stove top is not my style. Our's is a Hamilton Beach that has a thermal pot so it stays warm but doesn't get burnt and overheated (yuk!) from a hotplate. Also grind my beans each day. So I'm a snob - but, hey, to each their own. > > > > > "Nothing is ever lost by courtesy. It is the cheapest of pleasures, costs nothing, and conveys much." Erastus Wiman > > HAVE A GREAT DAY! > > KEITH GOUDY > keith.goudy@... > 512-590-2832 > > >
> > > > > > > > > On May 25, 2012, at 1:28 PM, jhdouglas59 wrote: > > > > After all these years of suffering with the electric coffee makers > such as Mr. Coffee and all other brands which make lukewarm nasty > tasting coffee disbursed by these marvels of technology, I finally > decided to get a non-electric percolator which makes coffee the > old-fashioned way of 50 years ago. > > I chose the Farberware Yosemite Percolator which I got online at > amazon.com for $19.99. The coffee which it brews is actually hot > and actually has a taste. It works best with cheap coffee. I prefer > Chase & Sanborn but I can't find that brand in Texas. So I use > Master Chef which I can buy at Wally World in Boerne. 33 ounces > for $5.35. Master Chef is roasted by Massimo Zanetti (which also > roasts Chase
& Sanborn). > > The Yosemite Percolator is a 10 cup percolator. > > We have an electric range. After many attempts at how to make the > perfect pot of coffee, here is my routine: > > For a full pot of coffee, use 4 giant scoops of cheapo coffee. > > Our electric range has a burner setting from 0 to 10. > I select the 5 setting and perc for 25 minutes. > Then I select the 2 setting and perc for 8 minutes. > Then I turn off the range and let the coffee set on an > unused cold burner for another 2.7 minutes. > > The coffee is then ready to drink. > > Pour as many cups as you wish. > > Put excess coffee in a thermal carafe to keep the remaining > coffee scalding hot. > > I tried in vain to find a stainless steel vacuum coffee pot > but could find none. So I selected the Yosemite percolator > instead. I
am pleased as punch with my purchase. > > To all you coffee freaks, I recommend this Yosemite percolator. > > As an aside, I suggest you also buy the glass percolator top > for a few dollars on Amazon.com to replace the yukko plastic > top which comes standard with the Yosemite. > > Anyone else out there frustated with lukewarm foul tasting > coffee? Ditch those Mr Coffee and related copy cat devices > and go back to the future with a percolator!!!! > > Have a swell day, > > The Coffeemeister >
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