
Perk Pot
At 6 am last Saturday, my 11 year old son woke me up to report that the electricity just went out.
No problem, I thought to myself, as I went into the kitchen to start the morning coffee. Here’s my chance to use my antique-looking peculator pot that I picked up on ebay recently. It has it’s own oil fired burner underneath. I can use it to impress my friends or brew coffee with out electricity.
It was Coffee Survival Mode time. This is just like camping. I’ll look like a real coffee hero.
No power also means no water. We have a deep well from which the water is pumped to a storage tank in the basement, and with no power, the pump won’t work. Fortunately, there was enough reserve in the the water tank for a pot of coffee and a few flushes of the toilet. So, I filled the peculator.
Now to the beans. Rats! How was I to grind the beans? Perhaps I could dig out the manual grinder that is buried with our camping gear? After searching for the manual grinder, I had no luck. What to do?

Makeshift Mortar and Pestle
Then I remembered reading about the Ethiopian Coffee Ceremony where the woman who is roasting the beans takes them off the heat and crushes them with a mortar and pestle. That’s what I’ll do. It worked, but it was a long process, taking about 15-20 minutes. With a little elbow grease, I had the coffee ground fine enough for my liking.
OK. Time to light the burner and get this coffee started. Double rats! It wouldn’t light. Not sure why, it was filled with oil, so I needed to look for another heat source. What to do?
On the search again, this time for sterno. I knew there should be some in the house because my wife used it for warming trays when we had family over for Easter. Found the sterno with no problem.
Life is good. The coffee is going.
All was well with my early Saturday morning.
This is how I brewed my coffee on a morning without electricity.
Is your coffee habit dependent on electricity or can you make do without plugging in?
What would you have done?