The Coffeepot that Time Forgot |
This blog is ostensibly reserved for art-related subjects, which
of late have been few and far between, but what’s more important than a good
cup of coffee or two in the morning to get the motor running so you can create
anther masterpiece on canvas in your home studio.
There’s not much to the routine. You boil the water, feed the cat, make the
coffee, have that important first cup, then a bowl of cereal, then another cup
of coffee, visit with your Internet friends, take the paint out of the freezer
section of the refrigerator, exit kitchen, walk through the living room to the
lavatory, then clean the cat’s litter box, then stride resolutely forward due
west around 8:30 a.m. to what has been your land of hope and glory for the past
35 years, a cluttered 12x20 ft. home studio with two average-size windows looking west/northwest over
Broadway on the eighth floor of an old apartment building on Manhattan’s
fashionable Upper West Side.
And when you get really old, as have I, that cup of coffee
is far more important than painting another masterpiece that the art market has no
interest in, primarily because you allowed yourself to get old without
acquiring any predilection for self-promotion.
So you can imagine my distress when the coffee maker I have
been using daily for some 25 years or more suffered an accident due to my
carelessness.
This coffee maker is, without any doubt whatsoever, the best coffee maker ever made. While I know this for certain, it is curious that the Internet is awash with pictures of current and vintage models of manual and automatic coffee makers of every conceivable configuration, but there is no image of this coffee maker other than the one posted above by yours truly.
This coffee maker is, without any doubt whatsoever, the best coffee maker ever made. While I know this for certain, it is curious that the Internet is awash with pictures of current and vintage models of manual and automatic coffee makers of every conceivable configuration, but there is no image of this coffee maker other than the one posted above by yours truly.
I confess to being very surprised by the absence of images
of this fine coffee maker. All the minor
variations of mediocre coffee makers are pictured multiple times, if you are so
bereft of meaningful things to occupy your time that you bother to look for
them in the first place.
One possible reason that there are no other images of this
coffee maker on the Internet is that it is so simple and perfect in its
conception that it was completely sold out and everyone who purchased this
model has been using it every day like me and wouldn’t dream of parting with it
on eBay or Craigslist. I also think the
manufacturer would rather not remind the public that it had once created the
perfect coffee maker – planned obsolescence, in my humble opinion.
Now in all fairness, there may have been something like a
product recall that I’m unaware of that has caused this particular model of
coffee maker to vanish off the face of the earth. I suppose that’s possible, but as I’ve
indicated, I have been in love with it since I first purchased it when it was introduced and it has
caused me no problems whatsoever. Well, the filter holder did come with a thin piece of flexible metal held by a plastic hinge installed at the base that was designed to slow the flow of coffee through the opening, but it eventually broke off and I didn't miss it at all. Was that enough of a problem to discontinue the model?
There’s really nothing simpler than this elegant
coffeemaker. Pour hot water over the
coffee in a filter and a minute or two later you’ve got four to six cups of hot
coffee in a thermos. Screw on the flat plastic
lid for a vacuum seal and the coffee stays at perfect drinking temperature for
the balance of the morning. Clean-up is
exceedingly easy -- just give the filter holder and glass lining a quick rinse
and you are set for tomorrow. And this model
looks so much better than most other coffee makers when sitting on the counter.
But a couple of months ago I set the plastic lid down too
close to the gas burner and the plastic melted, rendering the lid useless. I sent a couple of emails to Melita, the manufacturer, asking if they had replacement parts for this model, or perhaps another one gathering
dust in a warehouse somewhere, but got no reply whatsoever.
I’m still using my coffee maker, but with no lid to seal the
thermos, I have to heat up additional cups of coffee in the microwave as the
morning rolls along. Oh, the
ignominy. It’s just another irritating
life-changing event in the annals of an old starving artist as he muddles through
with his Internet alliances – original paintings for sale at https://www.etsy.com/shop/RobertHoldenFineArt
and prints and other reproduction art available at http://robertholdenart.com/ But please don’t tell anybody; otherwise I would be accused
of self-promoting!