Coffee Master 5-Cup Syphon / Vacuum Glass Coffee Maker
The Syphon/Vacuum Pot Coffee Maker is a clever device invented by
Robert Napier in 1840 that prepares an exceptional cup of coffee with a
potent aroma.
This is an great alternative for those who have an
aversion to the taste of the paper filters from drip brewers or for
people who dislike the sediment in the bottom of the cup from the French
press method.
The Syphon/Vacuum Pot was fashionable from around the
first world war through the 1950's, also known as coffee syphon it has
two glass globes with one sitting on top of the other with a filter
between them and the entire set up is suspended over a spirit lamp.
Water
in the lower globe is forced through heat into the upper globe where
the ground coffee is contained. Heat removal after brewing will create a
vacuum, thereby drawing coffee back into the lower globe.
What makes
vacuum pot method of brewing unique is, among others, its extraction.
The right extraction of coffee solids, the soluble solids which is
needed to give the coffee its flavour and body, will yield the ideal
coffee.
The extraction rate depends on how hot the water is, how long
the ground coffee remains in contact with the water, and how fine or
coarse the grind is.
Coffee connoisseurs consider vacuum pot method
far superior to drip coffee due to the fact that in drip method hot
water is simply poured over ground coffee in a filter, thereby
underextracting the coffee solids. The vacuum pot is noted for its brew
because as the coffee is brewed in the upper globe, the water
temperature is found to be in the range of 198 to 200 degrees, well
within the ideal temperature of 196 to 205 degrees f. This range reveals
the full spectrum of aromas and flavors in the ground coffee, thereby
giving a denser-textured, fuller-flavored cup than one otherwise
probably used to.