Coleman 9-Cup Aluminum Coffee Pot
3
Dec/095
Dec/095
- Lightweight and durable
- Rust-resistant
- Bail handle for easy pouring
- Replaceable clear glass knob lets you see the strength of your coffee as it percolates
- Easy to clean
Product Description
The Coleman 9-Cup Aluminum Coffee Pot is great for the campsite, the picnic, or at home. Made of lightweight, durable aluminum, the coffee pot is rust-resistant and easy to clean. The pot has a bail handle for easy pouring, and the replaceable glass knob lets you see the coffee as it percolates. Coffee Pot has a 9-cup capacity.
Coleman 9-Cup Aluminum Coffee Pot
Coleman 9-Cup Aluminum Coffee Pot
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8:32 pm on December 3rd, 2009
Being from hurricane country, and having lived through Hurricane Katrina, I’m always stocking up on things that are useful during emergencies or power outages. To me, coffee is a necessity (who’s with me on that?). Being able to brew coffee without power is highly desirable, and this pot should do the trick quite nicely. I haven’t had to use it yet, but it arrived in good shape and appears to have everything necessary to produce several cups of coffee (assuming hot water is provided).
Rating: 4 / 5
10:31 pm on December 3rd, 2009
Awesome Coffee maker, but you can buy it for $9. 99 on Coleman’s site. Why pay double? . . . just an fyi
Rating: 5 / 5
11:58 pm on December 3rd, 2009
This is a feather-weight, simple, basic campstove percolator. Coleman quality, classic camp style. Coffee tastes great. Makes enough for 2 people to each have two cups. Easy to clean. Looks even better the more you use it, gets a burnished look. I agree with another reviewer that you can get a few grounds at the bottom of the pot, but this can be avoided by not overfilling with water and/or coffee, and by not over-boiling. Do NOT use paper filters with this thing, it’s not designed for that. Simply start out with your stove on high, and once you see the percolator knob starting to perk–turn down the stove heat to medium. Let it perk 5-7 minutes–then turn it off. If you let it sit on high to perk, the top of the filter box will pop off inside the pot, which causes the grounds to overflow. Another good point: because it’s aluminum, which conducts and holds heat very efficiently–the coffee stays super-hot off the heat while two people each have a first cup, and it remains hot enough for when it’s time to have a second.
Rating: 4 / 5
2:46 am on December 4th, 2009
We’ve had an aluminum percolator coffee pot like this for about thirty-five years. It’s a great camping coffee pot. Lightweight. Back in the days before drip coffee makers (don’t remember those days?), percolators were the “in” thing for your kitchen. I keep Mr. Coffee-sized paper filters with the coffee maker, ready to go. Use a knife or a pencil to poke a hole in the bottom of the filter, put it in the coffee basket, put in a few tablespoons of coffee, pour in some water up to the bottom of the basket, put on the cover, set it on the Coleman stove, Svea stove or other lightweight backpacking stove, or over a fire, and within a short time, it is perking away. The hot water is drawn up the tube inside, hits the glass top, and drops into the coffee basket, then filters into the water below. The only problem is that you can easily bring the water to a roaring boil unless you’re paying attention, which is way too much heat. My experience. . .
Anyway, this is a keeper. We’ve still got the original one ready to go for power outages or camping. It has lasted “forever. ” A “classic?” Bought in 1974?
Rating: 5 / 5
2:48 am on December 4th, 2009
I have a Coleman stove that I use to cook while camping. I am also a coffee addict. This product helps me to use the tools I have while camping, with my desire to wake up in the morning. The coffee was surprisingly good. I went into it tepidly as I remember drinking coffee around the campsite years ago with my dad’s equipment and it was one step above mud.
The only complaint I would have is that metal gets hot, and you will need a pot holder, or folded paper towel to grab the lower loop for pouring. Other than that this is a tough little brewer.
The nub is glass and the water seems to heat pretty evenly, its really a no-brainer, for the price.
Rating: 5 / 5