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Small Cabin Forum / Off-Grid Living / Cabin Coffee
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Moomps
Member
# Posted: 17 Nov 2016 10:09
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I may be kind of a wimp, but my son and his family bought me a small Keurig single cup coffee maker for Christmas last year and it works great for me, and no waste.

LoonWhisperer
Member
# Posted: 17 Nov 2016 10:42
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Quoting: Moomps
I may be kind of a wimp, but my son and his family bought me a small Keurig single cup coffee maker for Christmas last year and it works great for me, and no waste.


I think that's a great solution for the cabin. I have a single cup one I use at the office and strongly considering taking it up to the property.

FishHog
Member
# Posted: 17 Nov 2016 10:46
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It really depends on whether you are on grid or off grid. Being off grid, and lugging in water, makes my practical options different than those who don't mind using electricity to heat water or water to wash out a French press.

timcook
Member
# Posted: 19 Nov 2016 18:59
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Perkulator coffee is my choice especilly when the wife gets up to make it and i can stay in the warm bed lol

KinAlberta
Member
# Posted: 19 Nov 2016 23:11
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http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-37989169

Julie2Oregon
Member
# Posted: 20 Nov 2016 10:23
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Love my French press. So easy. Boil water, add to grounds, stir, let it sit a few minutes, depress plunger. Because we can't have a cheerful plunger, can we? ;)

In a moment of weakness, and because I had Cabela's points, I ordered the Coleman non-electric drip coffeemaker. I haven't tried it out yet but it gets great reviews. You just set it up like a regular drip machine on a camp stove burner, load in the coffee and cold water and it does its thing like an electric one.

This is a good one for when I have company or just want more coffee than usual. Plus, the coffee will stay hot, unlike the French press.

paulz
Member
# Posted: 22 Nov 2016 17:38 - Edited by: paulz
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Happened by a Walmart the other day. They had a whole isle, both sides, of coffee makers. Computerized coffee makers, coffee maker cell phones, you name it but not one percolator. They did have a French press for$17 so I got it. My wife is the big coffee drinker and she gives it a big Yum!

Steve_S
Member
# Posted: 22 Nov 2016 18:00
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Lo & Behold someone else with a creative / inventive flair...

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/bripe-coffee-pipe-ottawa-1.3861161

Coffee-a-holics always find a way....

LoonWhisperer
Member
# Posted: 23 Nov 2016 12:39
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Quoting: Julie2Oregon
In a moment of weakness, and because I had Cabela's points, I ordered the Coleman non-electric drip coffeemaker. I haven't tried it out yet but it gets great reviews.


Good score Julie! Had the exact one a few years back. Worked great.

ramloui
Member
# Posted: 24 Nov 2016 09:22 - Edited by: ramloui
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I have been using the Coleman camping coffe maker for 4 years now at my off-grid cabin and I love it!
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paulz
Member
# Posted: 24 Dec 2019 11:06
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OK you coffee aficionados, I'm ready for better coffee. The Folgers pre-ground stuff isn't cutting it anymore, plus I just read that once the large can sees air the flavor degrades rapidly. It is convenient because it last a long time and I just shovel it into the dripper at home or French press at the cabin.

Better quality pre ground in smaller bags? Grind ur own? Do I have to buy it once a week?

Nobadays
Member
# Posted: 24 Dec 2019 11:26
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We are pretty spoiled when it comes to coffee... I started roasting our own coffee about 7-8 years ago. Started with an old air popcorn popper then a couple years later graduated to a Behmor coffee roaster. Love trying new coffees from different areas and growers, almost all that we buy are organic from small producers or co-ops.

Best way to step up to better coffee, get a grinder and only grind what you are going to need each time you make a pot, French press, pour over or however you make coffee.

So, when we run out or are on the road we usually defer to Peets coffee. Though with a bunch of company on Thanksgiving we bought a 2# bag of Starbucks...not a fan of Starbucks but I must say their Winter blend isn't half bad.

BTW... we are most definitely pour over fans, unbleached #2 filters. One cup at a time!

Fanman
Member
# Posted: 25 Dec 2019 09:39
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We had a Keurig for awhile, but the coffee it makes really isn't that great, and when it died we didn't replace it. At home I have a fancy timer/autogrinder/drip coffee maker that automatically runs just before I get up on weekdays, but at the cabin I have more time, so it's a #or #6 Melitta pour over directly into a thermal carafe. For backpacking, a #2 collapsible funnel (hint: a 35mm film can holds exactly enough ground coffee for one cup).

paulz
Member
# Posted: 25 Dec 2019 10:55
Reply 


Quoting: Nobadays
Best way to step up to better coffee, get a grinder and only grind what you are going to need each time you make a pot, French press, pour over or however you make coffee.


Sounds good. Hand grinder at the cabin? Is there cordless drill attachment? Thanks!

NorthRick
Member
# Posted: 25 Dec 2019 11:13
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Quoting: Fanman
(hint: a 35mm film can holds exactly enough ground coffee for one cup)


What's a 35mm film can?

Nobadays
Member
# Posted: 25 Dec 2019 11:13
Reply 


Quoting: paulz
Sounds good. Hand grinder at the cabin?


Solar and electric grinder we do have a hand grinder as well for travel.

Nobadays
Member
# Posted: 25 Dec 2019 11:18
Reply 


Quoting: Fanman
For backpacking, a #2 collapsible funnel (hint: a 35mm film can holds exactly enough ground coffee for one cup).


Wow! Hard core! We use instant for backpacking... Starbucks Via packs. We used to do the collapsible filter.... and use that for travel as well.... but we are those wierd ultra-light backpackers that count ounces... not grams but definitely ounces! Hey at nearly 65 years old less weight equals more miles! Hence, instant coffee!

moneypitfeeder
Member
# Posted: 25 Dec 2019 22:05
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We use an old Nicro vacuum coffee pot on the stove, makes the best coffee, ever. We just clean out the used grounds with a spoon, and fully clean it once a week so it isn't too wasteful with our water. We keep a backup pot (coffee is that important) of a china drip-style funnel with a pot too, where you boil the water separately and pour it through.

paulz
Member
# Posted: 14 Nov 2021 13:45
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This morning the Mr. Coffee drip make fried, fortunately after we had our first cups. Was headed out to buy a new one but we stopped at the Sunday flea market and I bought the percolator for $3. Works great. Never used one before, first pot brewing now. I get that it just keeps percolating, but how do you know when the water has fully circulated and time to drink? Just keep tasting?
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paulz
Member
# Posted: 14 Nov 2021 14:04
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Well the red light came on and it stopped percolating. How does it know when to stop?

gcrank1
Member
# Posted: 14 Nov 2021 15:00
Reply 


I think those old perks have a therm-sensor wired underneath to cut out.

paulz
Member
# Posted: 17 Nov 2021 10:57 - Edited by: paulz
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Thanks. Yeah I found instructions online, seems West Bend still makes them. Red light goes on, coffee ready to drink, percolating stops. Can leave it on all day to keep hot if desired.

Really liking it. Holds three time the water of the Mr. Coffee drip, got a tap instead of pouring out of a pot, no paper filters to deal with and glass to break. Tasted about the same, nothing special. Guessing restaurants use these.

Using it at my house since it's AC. I fill a big thermos and bring that to the cabin, then use a French press there with propane heated water.

travellerw
Member
# Posted: 17 Nov 2021 11:14
Reply 


LOL.. Everyone does something different..

We use an Aeropress and boil water on the wood stove or propane range. I can get 4 coffees out of 1 filter. The Aeropress makes a damn good coffee (as good as a fancy coffee shop).

Brettny
Member
# Posted: 17 Nov 2021 11:32
Reply 


We use an old stove top perculator. No filters

moneypitfeeder
Member
# Posted: 26 Dec 2021 20:42
Reply 


Quoting: paulz
Hand grinder at the cabin? Is there cordless drill attachment?
Yep! We have a Hario Ceramic Coffee Mill - 'Skerton Plus' and replaced the handle with a coupler nut onto the threaded handle shaft. The coupler nut is accepted like a drill bit. Works great. The setup is reversible in case all the batteries are dead and human power is needed. Fresh ground really makes a big difference.

jlemke
Member
# Posted: 3 Feb 2022 11:26 - Edited by: jlemke
Reply 


I second the Coleman stovetop drip. Really like it and you can turn the burner way down when done percolating and keep it warm.
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20180617_105510.jpg


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