Economy Cuban coffee maker, Aluminum construction . 3 cup
The three-cup cafetera is the standard issue in most Cuban-American kitchens — the size that covers a couple at breakfast, a small merienda visit, or one person who plans to refill.Stovetop moka construction in aluminum, with the familiar octagonal body, bakelite-style handle, and screw-together chambers. Brews roughly three demitasse-sized servings of strong stovetop espresso — enough for two cafecitos with espumita to spare, or a modest colada to share.Common Uses: Morning cafecito for two, afternoon merienda when a neighbor stops by, brewing the espresso base for café con leche, or pulling a small colada to pour into thimble cups and pass around.Cultural Context: The three-cup is the cafetera most Cuban households keep on the back of the stove permanently — washed, reassembled, ready. It's the size that shows up in wedding registries from Hialeah to New Jersey and the one abuela taught you to assemble: water to the valve, packed grounds level (never tamped), screwed on tight, low flame.Pairs With: Café La Llave or Bustelo bricks, sugar for whipping espumita, evaporated or steamed milk for café con leche, and a stack of demitasse cups for passing colada.Ships nationwide — a piece of hardware that's harder to source outside South Florida than the coffee that goes in it.
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- Default Title — 16.99 USD — In stock
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