This Beautiful Relic Has a Secret

Source: Reddit

Some kitchen items elicit wonderment not because of their worth, but rather because of the memories they evoke. This electric coffee percolator, beautiful the way it shines and shaped like a trophy, is a prime example.

Not just any coffee pot. This coffee pot is a memory of special times when stew was made and coffee was brewed, and the experience encapsulated a metric beyond taste — smell, sound, and aesthetics.

A Coffee Pot That Dressed to Impress

It has all the attributes of original. Curved handles, silver colored body, and decorative finial. It has all the flair of today’s impressive appliances. Only this percolator has appealing leaf patterns on the base and decorative accents that made it show worthy, not hidden and stored away.

It’s not made to be small, or hidden. It’s made to be seen, and most likely right in the middle of the brunch table surrounded by pastries, cookies, and conversation.

Source: Proxibid

How It Worked: Coffee Meets Convection

This model worked using the good old fashioned percolation:

  • Water would heat up in the bottom compartment.
  • Pressure would push it up a tube in the center.
  • The water would rain through coffee grounds in the perforated basket.
  • And repeat until the level of brew was satisfactory.

You can even watch the coffee using the unique clear knob on the top, which allows full visibility of observing the thicken brown color, it also added the bubbling sound effect that many homes and kitchens had, and still do.

Designed with a Purpose

This is not just any coffee pot you can buy in today’s market. The handles are art deco and the entire body has a design-first aesthetic. It even had decorative aspects to the spout, including a tiny rotating fans, but more for design, than utility!

Internally, the individually assembled parts which includes the heat element, tuber, and a perforated basket. The base holds the heat element, from this a cord will plug in and circulate power.

Easier and healthier than putting it on the stovetop.

Source: Proxibid

A New Way to Make Coffee

Percolator coffee is more oil and tastes richer than drip brewed coffee. The repeating processing of cycling thru the grounds takes more of the essence of the bean out.

Somewhere in their trajectories many can recall the unforgettable aroma of a fresh brewed pot of coffee wafting from the percolator. A deep, warm, good-smelling cup of coffee always a welcomed potion that began the day well before the conventional alarm clock.

Still Usable Without a Cap

If your percolator is working, and has an available compatible cord, it can still make delicious coffee. Trying to find cords compatible with older appliances is available on the internet or simply go to an antique store.

Use coarsely-ground coffee. In the end, fill the base vessel, plug it in, and still enjoy the slowly brewed method that was so popular many years ago.

Source: Etsy

Keep a Family Keepsake in a Kitchen

This vintage electric coffee percolator is distinctively designed and functionally usable for classes and keepsakes for functionality. To use or put into storage represents the best if an era, when some things that were useful, were built to last.

If you come across a vintage percolator, at flea markets or in your own cabinets, Clean it, plug it in, and let it cycle the wall of history one cup at a time.