"At that moment Zita came in with coffee. She made better coffee than anyone in the house; far better than Mr Challis, who went to the most terrific pother with special earthenware saucepans from Paris and a very difficult sort of chicory that no-one else had ever heard of, and exact calculations as to when to add the coffee to the water, and goodness knows what, and then produced a correct but unexciting beverage hardly worthy of all the fuss. Zita boiled water in a little black saucepan, then threw in handfuls of coffee, saying carelessly, 'It is easy – you chust make it strong enough', and out came a blazing-hot, fragrant black liquid worthy of Brillat-Savarin at his best. This annoyed Mr Challis . . ."
Stella Gibbons, Westwood (1946)
This sounds rather familiar to me, and I have to admit that I am a Zita, not a Mr Challis, when it comes to making coffee (and to cooking in general). By this I mean that I fling in coffee according to my mood rather than measuring exactly, with the exciting result that the coffee is always different. Frankly I think that measuring exactly is unlikely to yield a consistent result in any case, since the age and strength of the coffee and how long it has been open are also likely to affect the final flavour.
I don't measure either, it is more interesting that way! ha ha. I use a drip
ReplyDeleteApparently the worst way to make coffee is in a percolator because it sort of recycles it round and round and makes it taste muddy and stale. I'm a fan of the Turkish method myself but you do need to make sure it is finely ground. It's even better if you know someone who can read your fortune in the grounds when you are finished!
ReplyDeleteThere's a scene in Live and Let Die where Bond makes a coffee for M using a La Pavoni espresso machine, showing how worldly and cosmopolitan he is. The funny thing is, he adds cold milk to the coffee, then steams it! I'm not sure what the equivalent would be today, but having an espresso machine in your home in 1973 would have been pretty exotic.
ReplyDeleteIs that all it does?