Cuisinart Coffee Makers

Cuisinart Coffee Makers


 

Coffee Makers

Coffee Makers, cooking appliances having different varieties and methods to brew the coffee have removed the inconvenience to boil the water in different containers. In the very initial stage roasted and ground coffee beans were placed in a pot or pan to which hot water was added followed by attachment of a lid to commence the infusion process. An idea to change the process of brewing coffee finally made the first modern method for making coffee. The biggin, originating in France ca. 1800 was a two-level pot holding appliance in which coffee was placed in an upper compartment and water was poured to drain through holes in the bottom compartment into the coffee pot below. In the next development process of coffee makers, a French inventor developed the "pumping percolator" in which boiling water in a bottom chamber forces itself up a tube and then trickles through the ground coffee back into the bottom chamber.

Vacuum Coffee Brewer:

Vacuum Coffee brewer: a bodum vacuum brewer where the coffee is sucked back. The Napier Vacuum machine invented in 1840 was an early example of this type. The principle was to heat water in a lower vessel until expansion forced the contents through narrow tube into upper vessel containing ground coffee. When the lower vessel was empty and sufficient brewing time had elapsed then heat was removed and the resulting vacuum draw the brewed coffee back through a strainer into the lower chamber from which it could be decanted.

The next variant technique called a balance siphon having two chambers arranged side by side was the next coffee brewing method. On August 27, 1930 Inez H. Pierce of Chicago, Illinois invented the first vacuum coffee maker that truly automated the vacuum brewing process. An electrically heated stove was incorporated into the design of the vacuum brewer.

Electric Percolator:

James Nason of Massachusetts patented the early percolator design in 1865. An Illinois farmer named Hanson Goodrich is credited with patenting the modern percolator. The impact of science and technological advances as a motif in post –war design was eventually felt in the manufacture and marketing of coffee and coffee-makers.

Consumer guides emphasized the ability of the device to meet standards of temperature and brewing time, and the ratio of soluble elements between brew and grounds. In later years, coffee makers began to adopt more standardized form commensurate with a large increase in the scale of production required to meet postwar consumer demand. Plastics and composite materials began to replace metal, particularly with the advent of newer electric drip coffee makers in 1970s. During 1990s, consumer demand for more attractive appliances to complement expensive modern kitchens resulted in new wave of re-designed coffee makers in a wider range of available colors and styles.

Modern Coffee Maker

We find three things in the top of this coffee maker:

  • There is a reservoir that holds the water when you pout it into the pot at the start of the coffee making cycle.
  • There is a white tube that leads up from the below the reservoir base, carrying the hot water up to the drip area.
  • There is a shower head. Water arrives here from the white hot-water tube and is sprayed over the coffee grounds. In some coffee makers, the water comes out of the hose into a perforated plastic disc called the drip area and simply falls through the holes into the coffee grounds.

Making Coffee

The boiling water-pump in this machine having same mechanism drives a percolator type coffee machine, which makes extremely reliable.

Different Coffee Makers have different mechanism but the process is same to brew the Coffee from different Coffee Makers. No matter, what is it? Have fun with various Coffee Makers.



How do I use a cuisinart coffee maker?
I HAVE THIS COFFEE MAKER WITH NO "ON" BUTTON. IT WILL WORK IF I SET THE ALARM, BUT THEN THE GRINDER HAS TO RUN FOR 30 SECONDS IN ORDER TO GET THE COFFEE TO BREW...PLEASE HELP!!

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Why do my cuisinart coffee makers all die as soon as warranty is done?
My first 2 were DCC1200's. Clocks failed on both. Random times kept showing, program times self erased, etc. The last was a DCC2000. The unit has to be unplugged for a while before it will fire up again, then totally powers off after brewing. Clock dies fully. At first I thought my outlet was faulty, but the same thing happens in any outlet. So now I guess I need another CF...chances are slim it will be a cuisinart Just an added note: As I cannot find the receipt, the date stamp on the underside of the unit dictates warranty is valid until 8/08. So it seems they will replace it. I just hope it doesnt repeat.

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Has anyone else had problems with this coffee maker?
I bought this Cuisinart coffee maker http://www.cuisinart.com/catalog/product.php?product_id=514&item_id=626&cat_id=3 and I've had nothing but problems with it since I bought it. The door that holds the coffee filter doesn't want to stay shut then when it finally does, I turn the power button on and as soon as it starts to grind the coffee, the door swings open again. I love the coffee it makes when it works properly but its not worth the headache. I'm not sure if I got a lemon and I should take it back and exchange it for a new one or if all of this model have the same problem.

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