The
story of coffee-makers is a treasure trail of art, craftsmanship and ingenuity,
hidden behind the three-and-a-half centuries of a commerce in coffee,
which began with a few trade routes and grew into a worldwide commodity
market second in importance only to oil.
This
book will interest and delight all who enjoy the pleasures of drinking
coffee. It is also an invaluable guide to a new field for collectors of
attractive and unusual mechanical devices which include the delicate balancing
machines of the France of Louis Philippe, the magnificent silverplated
syphons of Victorian England and toy-like coffee making locomotives which
appeared all over Europe with the new railways. As furnishing pieces they
richly deserve to regain the place they once had in the dining rooms of
prosperous on the end of nineteenth century families.
Since
the hundreds of original ideas were almost invariably patented, the information
on dates, inventors and mechanisms has an accuracy unique in the field
of collecting. Every generation and most countries of the Western World
made their individual contribution to the brewing of coffee: the quaint,
spirit lamp heated cafetieres of Europe, and more recently the electric
percolators once beloved by Americans, and the original but rapidly disappearing
Italian hand lever espresso machines which symbolize a post-war era which
has become the latest historical period in its own right.
It
is also of special value to the worldwide coffee trade which for the first
time has in this book a comprehensive account of how the tropical crop
which supports the economies of nations has become the drink enjoyed with
passion by millions of people all over the world.
Edward
Bramah began his career in tea in 1950 on a tea plantation in Malawi.
He was trained as a tea taster, but sensing that coffee was due for a
revival, he left for Kenya and Tanzania to work for a coffee brokerage
company.
In
1968 he started designing coffee machines and in 1975 started the Coffilta
Coffee Machine Company. In recent years he has designed and introduced
the automatic filter machine bearing the same name.
When
Edward Bramah assembled his comprehensive collection of coffee makers
and machines, he discovered that published material on their origin and
identity was non existent. Years of painstaking research have uncovered
a wealth of information not only on the many enchanting pots, devices
and machines which can be found, unrecognized in the corners of antique
shops, but also the gallery of craftsmen and eccentrics who invented them.
His
wife, Joan, has collaborated with him in creating COFFEE MAKERS. "She
once worked in a television company", he says, "and while I
understand coffee making, she is better with words. Without her, this
book would certainly never have been written".
Balancing
Syphon
The
French double glass machine was a phenomenon, which had not completely
succeeded, but on the other hand had by no means failed. Price lists for
the flasks for Napier machines make it clear that thin-blown glass of
the mid-nineteenth century was capable of withstanding quite easily any
amount of boiling water, but they did require care. Inventors had great
confidence in them since they took out patents for fifteen years, but
they were really ahead of glass technology. They did not have the heatproof
glass that coffee machine manufacturers have available to them today.
Also, the enormous interest in coffee making in the early 1840s had its
own inevitable consequence: fashionable Paris moved on to something new.
The
Bastien patent of 1842, one example of which still exists in Paris, is
the link between the two-tier machine and the next fashion, which was
the balancing syphon. Bastien's is a double glass machine with the two
flasks arranged side-by-side instead of one above the other. The boiling
water is forced through a filter box containing the coffee into the second
flask fitted with a tap. The necks of both flasks are held by a single
crosspiece, and this is not only more stable, but puts both the heater
and the serving tap at the same convenient level. The only thing it lacks
is a method of automatically extinguishing the heat, and this improvement
followed almost immediately.
Balancing
syphons outlasted Louis Philippe and went right through into tile Second
Empire. Like tile double-glass cafetiere, they all have a superficial
resemblance but there were many variations. With persistence, it is still
possible to collect most of them but anyone wishing to do so should hurry
while they are still available. The one in the Science Museum in London
was found sitting, unrecognized, on the mantelpiece of a curator's office,
but that was a few years ago and their days of obscurity are over.
Balancing
syphons combined maximum efficiency with the maximum visual appeal. They
provided inventors with years of harmless fun and became popular all over
Europe. They are sometimes described as 'Viennese syphon machines'. As
in the case of the glass double-flask machines, it is difficult to discover
the exact moment when they first appeared since documentary evidence only
begins when they are improved, but in France they were often known as
a "gabet" and Louis Gabet, who had a workshop in the Marais
district of Paris, took out a patent in 1844. He did not claim ownership
of the entire construction of the balancing syphon but he did give a complete
description of it and he added a statement at the end of his specification
that he would defend his counterpoise device by legal action if necessary.
The Gabet model with the counterpoise was one of the more successful forms
of balancing syphon, and the way it worked is as follows.
The
weight of the cold water in the right hand container, which was commonly
ceramic, held open the lid of the spirit lamp. When the water passed over
into the glass flask the empty jar rose, assisted by the counterpoise
action of the weight attached to the ring around the flask. The lid was
released and flipped shut to extinguish the flame. The air in the jar
then cooled and the partial vacuum drew back the coffee, causing the jar
to descend again.
The
superior merits of the balancing syphon hardly need stating. It was extremely
safe, it was completely automatic and it offered great opportunities to
manufacturers of metal stands, painted china and gilded glass. There were
soon dozens of people doctors, mathematicians, pharmacists and cafe proprietors
as well as metalsmiths and glass makers who crowded in with their improvements
to the balancing mechanism and arrangements of the syphon tube. Turmel's
quite late patent of 1853 shows that it was possible to make a perfectly
simple design very complicated.
The
balancing syphon even came to England where Apoleoni Pierre Preterre of
le Havre sent Greeting to her most Excellent Majesty Queen Victoria in
a patent of 1849. England, with its increasingly prosperous middle classes,
must have looked very attractive to Preterre where the rest of Europe
was collapsing into revolution behind him. His specification is an omnibus
package which includes a roasting apparatus and coffee mill as well as
a balancing syphon with a counterpoise similar to Gabet's. A very interesting
feature is the alternative two-tier version with the spirit lamp between
them. It would be very interesting to know if an example of this still
exists.
Text and images courtesy of the Bramah Tea & Coffee Museum
The Clove building - Maguire Street - London SE1 2NQ
Telephone +44(0)207.378.0222 Fax +44(0)207.378.0219