The Authentic Cuban expresso Coffee Recipes
Just imagine the old days in Havana where old men dressed in
white linens playing dominos and sipping some of the finest
espresso in the world, while cigar smoke and guitar music linger
in the air. When one round of espresso is finished, women in
beautifully woven dresses gladly deliver more. Relive these
Cuban glory days in your own home with your do-it-yourself Cuban
expresso coffee recipes. Cuban cigars may be illegal, but great
coffee made from these Cuban expresso coffee recipes definitely
isn't. It isn't even that difficult to make.
Cuban expresso coffee recipes - making the beverage on your
stovetop
Start with one ounce of good water per serving and heat it over
a low flame in a small pot. Add one rounded tablespoonful of
coffee per ounce of water when the water boils. Stir briefly.
It's finished when it boils again. The tricky part comes now at
the end. Filter the expresso by using a Cuban flannel strainer,
which you can find at Cuban or exotic markets. Your typical
paper coffee, on the other hand, won't work. They will clog up
instead.
Cuban expresso coffee recipes - utilized from the aluminum
stove-top espresso makers
These sort of look like steel tea kettles and are available at
Latin, European, or specialty markets and coffee shops. To make
the espresso in one of these pressurized contraptions, add water
to it up to the brass safety valve in the bottom chamber.
Place the filter basket, or funnel piece, in the bottom chamber.
Add enough ground to coffee to make it level to the brim, if not
rounded in the center. Seal the upper chamber with the lower
chamber. Then heat over low to medium heat. It's done when you
the coffee starts to make bubbling sounds in the top chamber.
Take the coffee maker off the stove.
Whatever Cuban expresso coffee recipes you use, try adding a big
teaspoon of sugar to your serving. Or boil milk for a moment and
add it for caf