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Coffeemaker

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A stove-top, Italian style coffee maker
A 2016-model electric coffeemaker

A coffeemaker, coffee maker or coffee machine is a cooking appliance used to brew coffee. While there are many different types of coffeemakers, the two most common brewing principles use gravity or pressure to move hot water through coffee grounds. In the most common devices, coffee grounds are placed into a paper or metal filter inside a funnel, which is set over a glass or ceramic coffee pot, a cooking pot in the kettle family. Cold water is poured into a separate chamber, which is then boiled and directed into the funnel and allowed to drip through the grounds under gravity. This is also called automatic drip-brew. Coffee makers that use pressure to force water through the coffee grounds are called espresso makers, and they produce espresso coffee.

Types

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Vacuum brewers

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On 27 August 1930, Inez H. Peirce of Chicago, Illinois, filed her patent for the first vacuum coffee maker that truly automated the vacuum brewing process, while eliminating the need for a stovetop burner or liquid fuels.[1]

Cafetiere

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A cafetiere coffeemaker

A cafetiere (coffee plunger, French press in US English) requires coffee of a coarser grind than does a drip brew coffee filter, as finer grounds will seep through the press filter and into the drink.[2]

Because the coffee grounds remain in direct contact with the brewing water and the grounds are filtered from the water via a mesh instead of a paper filter, coffee brewed with the cafetiere captures more of the coffee's flavour and essential oils, which would become trapped in a traditional drip brew machine's paper filters.[3] As with drip-brewed coffee, cafetiere coffee can be brewed to any strength by adjusting the amount of ground coffee which is brewed. If the used grounds remain in the drink after brewing, French pressed coffee left to stand can become "bitter", though this is an effect that many users of cafetiere consider beneficial. For a 12-litre (0.11 imp gal; 0.13 US gal) cafetiere, the contents are considered spoiled, by some reports, after around 20 minutes.[4]

Single-serve coffeemaker

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The single-serve or single-cup coffeemaker had gained popularity by the 2000s.[5]

See also

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A cup of coffee

References

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  1. ^ "Patent drawing". Retrieved 6 February 2013.
  2. ^ "Manual brewing techniques give coffee lovers a better way to make a quality drink". www.post-gazette.com. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  3. ^ "Coffee Brewing - CoffeeResearch.org". www.coffeeresearch.org. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  4. ^ Rinsky, Laura Halpin (2008). The Pastry Chef's Companion. John Wiley and Sons. p. 119. ISBN 978-0-470-00955-0.
  5. ^ Gara, Tom (28 November 2012). "The K-Cup Patent Is Dead, Long Live The K-Cup". WSJ. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
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