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."
Ummm..ok. "Leftover" coffee...not familiar with the term.
...and let me grab the low hanging fruit...
"put the cubes in a glass of VEGAN milk for instant(ish) iced coffee" "Store leftover coffee in a pitcher in the refrigerator for an iced coffee any time you want one. This is how we “made” our iced coffee at the coffee shop I worked at"
Wow. Who is this 20-something hipster douche-keteer that believes that chilling coffee is some sort of trade secret?
LOL this article somehow misses the point that we're shifting towards single-serve coffee (Keurig, Nespresso etc) and therefore there is no "leftover" coffee. It's the reason we substituted Keurig for Bunn in the first place, and never looked back. (For that matter, I can't remember when last we made a pot of tea, either.)
During World War Two, battleship sailors used coffee to clean the main deck. It worked very well. A hunting friend I knew was on BB Nevada, and told me that's how it was done on his ship.
Leftover coffee??!! Huh? I make a pot of coffee every other day. I drink half and then reheat the other half the next day with the microwave. The trick is not to let it sit there cooking. After it is brewed, I unplug the machine.
For Kim And what is this "leftover coffee" of which you speak? Sure, I suppose that kind of thing is possible, but I don't remember having ever seen one in the wild.
Ummm..ok.
ReplyDelete"Leftover" coffee...not familiar with the term.
...and let me grab the low hanging fruit...
"put the cubes in a glass of VEGAN milk for instant(ish) iced coffee"
"Store leftover coffee in a pitcher in the refrigerator for an iced coffee any time you want one. This is how we “made” our iced coffee at the coffee shop I worked at"
Wow. Who is this 20-something hipster douche-keteer that believes that chilling coffee is some sort of trade secret?
...keep in mind...
They drive and they VOTE.
Dittos to the above comment. It reminds me of the joke about how ice cubes are no longer served in Poland, because the recipe was lost.
ReplyDeleteAnd Hey, if we're talking "off-label" uses for coffee, why no mention of red-eye gravy?
Also, I used to greatly enjoy sprinkling ground coffee over ice cream.
LOL this article somehow misses the point that we're shifting towards single-serve coffee (Keurig, Nespresso etc) and therefore there is no "leftover" coffee. It's the reason we substituted Keurig for Bunn in the first place, and never looked back. (For that matter, I can't remember when last we made a pot of tea, either.)
ReplyDeleteDuring World War Two, battleship sailors used coffee to clean the main deck. It worked very well. A hunting friend I knew was on BB Nevada, and told me that's how it was done on his ship.
ReplyDeleteI, for one, hate iced coffee. Cold coffee is pretty much the same as warm beer. Undrinkable.
ReplyDeleteScottiebill
What list of leftover coffee uses could be complete without the "coffee enema"?
ReplyDeleteWe used to take old mess hall coffee and put it in garden sprayers and use it to clean the undercarrige of our trucks and jeeps.
ReplyDeleteThe Coffee enema; Steve McQueen's last dance
ReplyDeleteLeftover coffee??!! Huh?
ReplyDeleteI make a pot of coffee every other day. I drink half and then reheat the other half the next day with the microwave. The trick is not to let it sit there cooking. After it is brewed, I unplug the machine.
jim
For Kim
ReplyDeleteAnd what is this "leftover coffee" of which you speak?
Sure, I suppose that kind of thing is possible,
but I don't remember having ever seen one in the wild.
Where/Who EVER has "left-over coffee?"
ReplyDelete