Aihuxi.129 net.cooks utzoo!decvax!harpo!mhtsa!ihnss!ihuxi!otto Tue Apr 13 00:41:34 1982 A Utensilemacs s.netout and a Recipe for It One utensil I use quite a lot and recommend to others (although to a necessarily select audience) is an authentic Ibrik for the making of Turkish/Greek/Armenian Coffee. I got mine by going to a good coffee shop in Philadelphia, describing what I wanted. They found it a supplier's catalog, and I had mine a couple of weeks later, costing something like $10. (This was a few years ago.) An Ibrik is something like a butter melting pan, with a long handle and constricted neck. The neck constriction allows the coffee to *foam up* as it is being prepared, something important in the making of this type of coffee. Turkish/Greek/Armenian Coffee, prepared in the morning, is incredibly rich, seductive, and quite an eye opener with no trace of bitterness. When made with Kona or Blue Mountain beans, it is only surpassed by espresso (made with the same kind of bean) as the best coffee in the world. And the equipment needed for making this kind of coffee properly is much less expensive than the cost of a good home espresso unit. Recipes vary for this kind of coffee. Here is mine: TURKISH/GREEK/ARMENIAN COFFEE Grind 3 tablespoons of your favorite coffee beans as fine as your equipment will allow. The best fineness is almost like talcum powder, but I don't know of any home equipment short of a hand-powered Turkish coffee grinder that can achieve this. I use a Braun coffee mill set two settings below Mocha. This seems to work fine. A grinder that uses whirling blades instead of mill wheels will not do, because a uniform fineness cannot be achieved. The resulting grounds will not settle properly. Put the ground coffee, one cup of water, and (optionally) 3 teaspoons of sugar into the Ibrik. Put the Ibrik over medium-high heat. Wait until the coffee begins to foam up the neck of the Ibrik, remove from heat, swirl the coffee in the Ibrik and count off 6 seconds. Then put the Ibrik back on the heat, wait until it foams up a second time, pull off the heat and count to 6. Put the Ibrik back on the heat, wait until it foams up a third time, and when it does take it off the heat and pour out the coffee into a coffee cup, grounds and all. It is considered good form (I am told) to have enough foam to cover the entire surface of the liquid in the cup. Let the coffee sit undisturbed for a few minutes, letting the grounds settle to the bottom of the cup. Then drink the coffee, stopping just before the grounds at the bottom begin to be disturbed. One cup of this coffee in the morning, and no more coffee will be needed (or appreciated) for the rest of the day! I have prepared this coffee for people who don't like coffee and they loved it! Try it before judging it to be "too strong" or "too bitter" or anything of the sort. The taste is quite unexpected (unless, of course, you have had this coffee in a restaurant before). George Otto BTL, Indian Hill ----------------------------------------------------------------- gopher://quux.org/ conversion by John Goerzen of http://communication.ucsd.edu/A-News/ This Usenet Oldnews Archive article may be copied and distributed freely, provided: 1. There is no money collected for the text(s) of the articles. 2. The following notice remains appended to each copy: The Usenet Oldnews Archive: Compilation Copyright (C) 1981, 1996 Bruce Jones, Henry Spencer, David Wiseman.