Neapolitan Flip Coffee Maker
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Neapolitan Flip Coffee Maker
© Denzil Green
Flip DripA Neapolitan Flip Coffee Maker is a very old-fashioned drip-coffee maker to make very strong coffee. It is actually a French design that has been taken to heart by Italians -- particularly people in Naples. It's the coffee pot that you see in classic Italian movies, such as "Roma, città aperta" by Roberto Rossellini.
It consists of two pots that fit together top to top, so that one is upside down (the one that has the spout.) Each has a handle. In between, there's a small, flat section with holes to hold the ground coffee. This flat section is actually two parts. It's a tall cylinder, with a recessed compartment at the top, and a screw-on "lid." The bottom of that recessed compartment has fine perforations in it. This is what you spoon the ground coffee into. The screw-on lid also has perforations in it.
You fill the bottom section with water, and place the cylinder in. The recessed compartment should end up just above the water. You next fill this compartment with coffee without packing the coffee down, and screw the lid on. Leaving the remaining pot empty, you place it upside down on top. You put the assembled coffee pot on a stove burner, and bring it to almost a boil.
The coffee pot is ready to flip when it begins to fuss. There's a tiny hole near the top of the bottom pot. When a few drops of water start to seep out of this, you are ready to flip the pot.
Flipping it puts the boiling water on top. The water runs down through the compartment in the middle with the ground coffee in it, and flows into the part which had previously been the top. It's simply gravity driven: the weight of the water pulls it down through the coffee (which is why you musn't pack it tightly.)
This bottom section is the section that has a spout on it, making it look vaguely like a watering can. That's how you pour the finished coffee out.
Most also include another lid -- after all the coffee is brewed, you can remove the top pot, and put the lid in its place.
The pots are made in copper, stainless steel or aluminum. The classic and most common is aluminum. They come in different sizes. Cup capacity estimates for these pots are given in 1 1/2 oz (45 ml) sizes -- espresso size cups.
Coffee in them, especially the aluminum ones, gets tepid very quickly, so you may be best to have two or three of the pots of different sizes, choosing the right size for the occasion, and serve it all at once.
These pots are particularly popular in Naples. There, to stop the coffee from getting cold while it's dripping down, a small improvised cap is often made from a piece of tin foil or newspaper, and put over the mouth of the spout, to stop hot air escaping. In Naples, this is called a "cuppitiello" (in the rest of Italy, it would be called probably a "cappuccio" -- cap.) Some people in Naples will even hold the pot in hot water (as in a water bath) while the coffee is dripping to help avoid heat loss during that phase, but you have to stand there and hold it, or it may topple over in the water.
In Naples, it's also traditional to have a small glass of water first before drinking coffee, to clean your mouth so that you'll be able to enjoy the flavour of the coffee better.
Coffee made in these pots is usually served black.
These coffeepots require a stove to use them on, so they are generally no good for an office.
Flipping it in Italian is called "girare." Make sure you do your "girare" near the sink, in case any water escapes. Sometimes a stream of hot water will come out the small hole for a few seconds after the flip. With practice, you learn which side of your pot to point towards the sink.
Wash with soap and water. Don't put aluminum ones through the dishwasher.
See Also: Potsdam Boiler Coffee Maker
Other entries for: Coffee Makers
Coffee Percolator, Espresso Machines, Infusion Coffee Maker, Neapolitan Flip Coffee Maker, Potsdam Boiler Coffee Maker, Vietnamese Coffee Press
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