STUFF I
INVENTED
so you don't have to |
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scream-of-consciousness; "If you're trying to change minds and influence people it's probably not a good idea to say that virtually all elected Democrats are liars, but what the hell."
Wednesday, September 17, 2014
Clean that pot, Cheap!
"If the number of Islamic terror attacks continues at the current rate, candlelight vigils will soon be the number-one cause of global warming. " |
This will be the comment box |
13 comments:
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after you clean your pot, what do you do with the stems and seeds ?
CF in CO - 9/17/14, 4:54 PM
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Thanks, I'll try that in my coffee thermos.
- 9/17/14, 5:25 PM
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You are a patient man to still use a percolator. Last Christmas I bought a Keurig and haven't looked back.
- 9/17/14, 5:30 PM
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Esteve, we have had 2 Keurigs - one a replacement and that crapped out too. Not very reliable - will never buy another. My Bunn does a great job and works and works.
Bolivar - 9/17/14, 7:16 PM
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My first squadron around 1975. They told me to clean the coffee mess. We had two of those huge silver 36 cup percolators. I scrubbed them with scouring powder til they shined like a new penny. I pissed off more chiefs in one fell swoop than any other time in my 20 year career. It seemed to effect the flavor.
Tim - 9/17/14, 8:24 PM
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Tim, I made a 36 cupper on the USS Constellation for a safety stand down. Air Boss had the first cup and spit coffee everywhere. I had filled the pot from a mislabeled saltwater valve.
- 9/17/14, 9:13 PM
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Hope I have better luck with the Keurig. So far we really enjoy the convenience and it makes good coffee.
- 9/17/14, 9:17 PM
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For the OPEs (Old Pacific Explorers) I ran into back in the very early 60s, coffee was a sacrament.
A CPO's mug had to be white on the outside with an emblem containing his ship or unit and at least one anchor. His name (or initials) had to be on it, either opposite the emblem or on the bottom, scored into the clay before firing or in heavy black paint.
Otherwise, the outside was clean . . . spotless, in fact. The area of the rim where his lips touched it to sip or drink was a dark stain, like mahogany. Inside, the walls boasted a patina hauntingly reminiscent of a well-worn saddle. At the bottom had to be an unremovable finish like dark walnut covered with a generous coat of heat-treated polyurethane.
The coffee on the Signal Bridge between the hours of 2200 and 0500 had to be pulled from the spigot, coiled up in the bottom of the mug like a length of heaving line, snipped off with electricians' pliers, and then eaten with a fork. - 9/18/14, 7:47 AM
- BlogDog said...
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I have a Moccamaster with a stainless steel carafe and if I don't feel like using a bottle brush on it, I put baking soda and water in to a thin paste consistency, slosh it around, leave it for an hour or so and then rinse it out. Works nicely.
- 9/18/14, 8:55 AM
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Anon 5:25, I use baking soda in my thermos and it works great !!!
Put about 3 tbs in and fill with hot water. Let it sit over night and you'll be amazed at the shite that comes out. I do mine once a year.
OC - 9/18/14, 1:23 PM
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$36?
that's two $18 crap makers. 6 months and throw it away and buy another. the squirrls can clean the carcass out and raise a litter.
- 9/18/14, 6:14 PM
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Try a little splash of bleach. I was amazed when I tried that on an old thermos after I'd worked on it with baking soda and brush.
- 9/18/14, 10:54 PM
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We paid about $100 for the Keurig Silver model, and we originally figured that $100 every two years for a coffee maker was a fair deal.
Our Keurig is entering its fifth year of sterling service, but it's starting to struggle a bit, so we're planning on getting a new one just as a backup.
We had a Bunn professional (two pots), but we got sick of throwing half a pot away every day. - 9/19/14, 11:54 AM