☕⚡ Brew Bold, Brew Together – Coffee That Keeps Up with Your Hustle
The Granite Ware Coffee Boiler Set is a 12-cup enameled steel percolator designed for fast, even heating and effortless cleaning. Its durable, non-reactive surface ensures pure coffee flavor without compromise, making it perfect for both home and outdoor use. Lightweight and dishwasher safe, it’s built to deliver consistent, large-batch coffee with style and reliability.
Exterior Finish | Enameled Steel |
Material | Enameled Steel |
Item Weight | 16 ounces |
Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
Item Dimensions D x W x H | 7.31"D x 10"W x 7.31"H |
Capacity | 12 Cups |
Style | Traditional |
Color | Speckled Black |
Recommended Uses For Product | Camping, Outdoor Activities |
Operation Mode | Manual |
Human Interface Input | Touchscreen |
Filter Type | Reusable |
Specific Uses For Product | Camping, Outdoor Activities |
Special Features | Durable |
Coffee Maker Type | Percolator |
J**S
Love it, has saved our coffee lovin lives often!
So this thing rocks and the price is great. It held up well now for over a year or so and I love it! We did a lot of camping and love our coffee and this worked perfect for sticking on the fire to boil water for our french press coffee!Here's the beauty, it worked for when we had power outages too and had to have our coffee still and yay, having a french press and this, so long as you have a grill of any kind so long as it's not electric then boom, you can have your hot water!We used it for hot water for soup too and it's huge so you can do a lot of water at once if you need to. The lid comes off rather easily but that is not a problem and it is easy to clean too. Sturdy and that's good since I am prone to dropping things all too often!And here's another thing, this was indispensable to us when last year we were homeless for 6 months, living between campgrounds, rest stops and friends and families places. Some of our family doesn't drink coffee and didn't have tea pots either so this was a life saver!You really can't go wrong with this, worth every penny to us and indeed a fab product!
K**S
Works great with my Rocket Stove
In anticipation of more frequent electrical power outages, we purchased a rocket stove. Boiling water is otherwise very slow using solar ovens or using 12-volt battery power. Since this pot is made to work on open flames, it was a perfect choice for the rocket stove. Soot forms on the bottom, but it is easy to clean. These old classics work the best!
F**K
Good size for small gatherings around the fire. Terrific for Cowboy Coffee.
It's just a simple ceramic coated, cheaply fashioned lightweight, non stainless, kettle, but at under twenty bucks this was one of the better values we've found for making cowboy coffee over a fire. That it has traditional western styling was an aesthetic perk for backyard fire-pit cookouts more than actual camping. For treks, more modern compact designs are the way to go. But when your house is just a few yards away, this is awesome for cowboy coffee or just boiling some water for tea or hot cocoa. Though we'd recommend getting a separate kettle for coffee and for the other if you plan to do both, as they say you want to treat cowboy coffee kettles like cast iron skillets: don't wash out the flavor.Amazon currently lists this as 100oz. I guess they're rounding up. The manufacturers sticker shows 3qt (96oz) as well as 2.8L (just under 95oz). Regardless, we find there's really only room for about 70oz IF you're doing cowboy coffee. If you're just heating water then it'll hold more by filling it to the rim. But for cowboy coffee it's best to stop filling below the spout, bearing in mind you've got about a cup of grinds to pour in on top of that. I won't bother going into detail how to make it. It's easy enough to find videos online from Kent Rollins explaining what to do. Being used to drip machines and French press, we found we had to experiment a little to get the strength just right, but it was well worth it. Surprisingly. As bringing coffee to a full rolling boil goes against what I've learned in the past about brewing. But it wasn't bitter at all.As you can see in the pictures this kettle can withstand being in some pretty hot flames. And you'll need a good fire to get it boiling good, if you've got an open pit, where there's no way to direct all the heat just toward the bottom of the kettle itself. We've already made coffee a good number of times this way with no signs of deterioration of the materials. We usually put on the coffee while we're getting a good bed of heat for grilling, which we usually use pine for, before adding harder or more flavorful and less sooty woods to the coals for the actual grilling after the pine has turned to hot coals. This does leave a fair bit of black soot on the outside of the kettle to clean. So if you don't have pine you need to get rid of (beetles have been killing a lot of ours in recent years, so we have lots), harder woods or soft woods without all the sap, should make it a lot easier to clean the kettle later. So the cleaning rating really depends on what type of wood you use, as well as your dependency on dishwashers, which for coffee would be a bad idea, even if the kettle was compatible to clean that way.It comes with your typical lid, flexibly attached to the handle for easy checking of what you're heating so that it doesn't fall off in the fire if you forget your glove, rag or something or leave it boiling too long. But it can also be separated from the kettle easily during cleaning. There is no inner percolator like most models, which is probably one of the reasons for the lower price.
J**K
Not a bad pot for the money
First of all, this is not a coffee percolator! It is a coffee boiler, made for boiling coffee or for tea water. It works well for either application. Mine has not rusted, as some have complained about. You do not wash the pot but only rinse it out and make sure it is well air dried.Follow Kent Rollins on U-tube for seasoning a pot and you can't go wrong. Making coffee in a boiler is no problem if you know what to doAgain, follow Kent Rollins' instructions.I have been a civil war reenactor for 38 years and have had boiled coffee for that entire time. Done well, boiled coffee is even better than coffee from an electric or perc coffee pot.The handle does get hot and contents must be poured using a small rag... just common senseThe spout holes seem small and it pours slow, but with good reason. If you try to pour to fast the lid might pop open and you will get burned, so use another small rag on the lid. Pouring too fast causes a lot of coffee grounds to get in your cup as well.Boiled coffee is good coffee... it just takes practice learning how to make it properly. BTW... coffee can be purchased in sealed pouches. Using the pouches, there is no problem with coffee grounds in your coffee.You get what you pay for, and this is not a premium pot but it would serve well if cared for as a camp pot.
M**
No good. 2 in a row flawed
Very disappointed. The first one I got was chipped and bent. The replacement had a flaw in the seam at the bottom, causing a leak. I returned them both and bought a kettle from an antique store. Art Deco era and still in perfectly usable condition. Hate to sound like an old person, but they don't make them like they used to.
M**Y
Perfect for camping
We used this over the open flame for while camping. Worked perfectly! Just don't forget to take a towel or potholder to pick it up.
F**O
No percolator
Decent quality. Advertised to make coffee, but no percolator was provided. Disappointing.
C**A
The Real Deal
Great for making real campfire coffee!
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