Farberware Classic Yosemite Stainless Steel Percolator
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| List Price: | $45.00 |
| Price: | $19.95 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
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Ships from and sold by Amazon.com
2 new or used available from $19.95
Average customer review:Product Description
If you grew up in the 1940's and 1950's, it's more likely you saw a coffee percolator like this one on your parents' stovetop. The origins of the percolator go back to about 1818 in France. Prior to that, coffee was made in vacuum pots or was boiled. By the middle to late 1800's travelers immigrating to the United States from Europe brought these percolators with them. Many of these pots made coffee for families that used wood stoves on their journey westward. This Farberware model follows that classic design but is made of stainless steel. It's easy to use, clean, and maintain. You can expect years of quality service from this coffee maker. Farberware has added a stay-cool handle to help make pouring a lot easier. It truly is a classic refined.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #159 in Kitchen & Housewares
- Brand: Farberware
- Model: 50124
- Dimensions: 7.00" h x 8.70" w x 9.20" l, 2.25 pounds
Features
- Sleek percolator brews 4 to 8 cups coffee
- Permanent filter basket; no messy paper filters needed
- Made of 18/10 stainless steel polished to mirror-finish
- Stay-cool synthetic handle; dishwasher safe
- Measures 8-1/4 by 6-5/6 by 9 inches
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
Sleek and contemporary, this gleaming percolator brews from four to eight cups of coffee on the stovetop for full, old-fashioned flavor. A permanent filter basket (no messy paper filters needed) provides modern efficiency. The handle is synthetic (to stay cool) and slightly textured, a combination ensuring safe, comfortable pouring. Because the percolator is made of highly polished 18/10 stainless steel, the beauty of its gleaming mirror finish is long-lasting. To fully maintain the finish, the percolator should be hand washed, although the filter basket and glass cap can go into the dishwasher. The percolator stands 8-1/2 inches high on a 6-1/4-inch-diameter base. --Fred Brack
Customer Reviews
Fantastic Percolator
Perked coffee is old school, to be sure, but a well-made cup of percolated brew is robust and satisfying in a way that drip coffee isn't. Not only does the percolation process provide a deeper and fuller mouth, I think, but a percolator, bubbling away, is a lovely sight and sound.
If you don't like perked coffee, don't bother with any percolator. But if you are interested in something other than drip brew, consider this Farberware percolator. I'm not one to ooh and ahh over design, but this is a darned handsome piece of kitchen equipment. Take a look and the large picture and I will spare you the adjectives. :)
The stainless steel construction makes it sturdier and heftier than thin-metal percolators you might buy in the camping gear section of a chain store. While the name "Yosemite" evokes coffee bubbling over a campfire, I'd probably not use this on a wood fire to avoid blackening. I mean, this thing really is shiny and pretty. But as heavy-duty as it is, perhaps it would clean up well.
It's a capacious pot, making eight cups of coffee. The interior basket and rod are well made, fitting tightly together and clamping in place with the lock-down lid. It makes more coffee than my old electric percolator, but it does take up a burner on the stove-top.
Lastly, should you buy this unit, remember: Perked coffe may be good, but it's a danged sight hotter than drip brew. Of course, you'll probably figure that out for yourself...
Good coffee even during a power failure
During Hurricane Isabel I had no electricity and was able to make great coffee on my gas stove with this percolator. I use it daily now.
I found a replacement for the plastic top at Fantes.com -- part #11380, "Small Replacement Percolator Glass Top" for $1.99.
see:
http://fantes.com/percolators.htm#tops
If you wash it in the dishwasher, don't use the "heated dry" option as it will leave permanent water stains. Also, I found that this coffee is reheatable [once] and still tastes good, not muddy.
Percolator convert
I have never had a percolator before I bought this Farberware percolator. I have always had drip coffee makers, which were ok, but expensive and I was trying to get away from plastic in the kitchen. I read all the reviews here and decided at this price I couldn't really go wrong and I was right. The Yosemite percolator makes a very smooth cup of coffee.
A few things I have learned:
Coarser ground coffee leaves less residue in the pot.
I use a regular coffee filter and just poke a hole through the middle to stop any grounds from getting into the coffee.
I turn my burner on high until it starts percolating, then down to med-low for approximately 7 minutes.
I make sure my handle is not on top of the burner, but rather, just over the edge and it has never gotten hot. I have a smooth top range.
After the coffee is done brewing, I pour it into a stainless steel thermos to drink throughout the day.
I hand wash my percolator and have had no discoloration or scratching to the surface.
You really can't go wrong with this purchase and it is really pretty sitting on the stove, too. I bought another one for camping.





