Thursday, April 12, 2012

Ready for your cuppa Io?


Not that I've been dreaming of Greek coffee the way I dream about $700 espresso machines.  Not that I've been looking for a better way to do coffee than to make it out of beans I roasted the night before.  Not that I need to change anything about my morning routine (except get my kids to sleep past 5:30 a.m.). But I have been intrigued by the unused briki (BREE kee) in my enormous and less than useful coffee pot collection.  They are always leftover at estate sales and cheap in thrift store because most people don't know what they are or how to use them.

So when her sister-in-law in Athens sent a care package that included the most delicious smelling fresh ground coffee I'd ever stuck my nose in, Evdoxia, my Greek cooking teacher, insisted I try some. It smelled so good in the bag. Good and creamy enough to put on your skin like lotion, or put in your mouth with a spoon. Ground so fine it felt like talc.


But the most remarkable thing about it is how easy it is to make a perfect cup. Here's the recipe, it's too easy not to try:



Put two demitasse cups of water into the briki (or however many cups you want to serve). Put it on a burner set to medium heat. While the water is heating, add a teaspoon of sugar, if desired, for each cup of water. Continue to heat about 45 seconds more before adding a heaping teaspoon of extra-finely ground coffee. Stir. Continue heating until creamy foam (the crema) forms and the liquid begins to rise as if it were going boil over. Remove from heat. Immediately pour evenly into the cups. Wait a minute for the coffee to cool and the grounds to settle. Drink down to just above the grounds (more like mud).


That's it. The whole process takes about five minutes, making it and drinking it.  It may look like a shot of espresso, and it does pack a similar punch.  But it is so smooth and creamy, not bitter at all. It is like ... actually there really isn't anything to compare it to. After you drink it you feel like you've had your coffee and doughnut at the same time.

Of course, that's the American way of drinking Greek coffee. The way Evdoxia describes it, serving proper Greek coffee is kind of like a Chinese tea ceremony. There is a certain way of setting the table, and of serving and consuming the beverage and accompanying cookie, spoon of preserves and glass of cognac.

Now wouldn't that just hit the spot for your afternoon snack?