Making coffee at the camp site is an art. I don't mean heating water and adding freeze dried or any other instant coffee. I'm talking about making coffee in a percolator the way it used to be made. There is nothing like the aroma of brewing coffee on a camp stove. This is the best way to brew coffee without electricity. Coffee for a percolator is a coarser grind than the automatic drip coffee more common today. Start by filling the pot with fresh water to the bottom of the spout. Fill the basket to just below the center post with coffee. Use about 4-6 tablespoons depending on the size of the percolator. Don't overfill. This is where percolator coffee gets tricky. Heat the pot till the water just starts to perk. We don't want it to get to a full boil so as not to ruin the taste. Turn the stove down as low as it will go, then turn it a little lower. I say this because you will probably need to turn it lower than you think. The idea is to keep the coffee perking once every 2-3 seconds. If perked too fast, the grounds will be in the bottom of the pot and the flavor will be boiled away. Perk for 15 minutes to start with. You can increase the time for stronger coffee. Keep in mind, the longer coffee perks the more over-used the grounds become. Enjoy!
Alan has been family camping all his life. Most articles are written from personal experience. Visit his website at http://www.camping-equipment-store.com
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How To Make Percolator Coffee
The word "percolator" has come to mean that special coffee pot that used to sit on Grandma's stove and bubble away like mad all morning long. Typically they consist of a heat proof pot that holds the water, a long tube (like a straw) that holds a filter basket at the top. This filter is normally made of metal and holds the coffee grounds apart from the water in the main pot. Usually fairly oarsely ground coffee is used and a perforated lid is placed over the filter in order to distribute the water evenly over the grounds.
As the water in the pot reached the boil, it is forced up the tube and repeatedly spilled over the grounds in the filter basket. In this way both water and the freshly brewed coffee drips back down into the hot water and over the grounds. Gradually the coffee becomes stronger as the water/coffee continues to drip over the grounds. This process continues as long as the pot is kept at the boiling point.
Evn though we may hold special memories of percolaters, they are not a particularly good way to make a great cup of coffee. In fact many people rank percolator coffee right beside coffee boiled directly in the water! When it is made in a percolater a number of things happen that produce a less than perfect cup of coffee.
For starters, the water is overheated. Boiling water simply extracts too many of the unwanted bitter flavours in the coffee and should be avioded if possible (which isn't possible with a percolator). Also the coffee grounds become overextracted by repeatedly passing already brewed coffee back over the grounds. Finally the boiling/percolating action of the liquid tends to release many of the desirable flavours and compounds into the air. While this does produce a wonderful aroma of fresh coffee in the house, it can often lead to flat tasting coffee.
In the end, it is often best to avoid percolators if you can. There are other affordable ways of brewing great coffee, even if it may mean turning your back on wonderful aromatic memories.
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