Sunday's thrift finds...WOO HOO

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hoover1060

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So we hit the local junk stores today, at Marklunds in Woodale had some wine glasses for $.30 a piece, can't beat that, with a stick, so we bought them.
At St Vincent DePaul in Addison we found these, a minty, shiny coffeemaster, and this cute little Sears JIFFY SKILLET, seemingly unused.
$3.99 for the coffeemaster, $7.99 for the skillet

Can't wait to try both out!

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glass part

flips over... I wonder if I can cook in this too?
Also its completely submersible... should make cleanup easy!

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I wonder if cooking in the lid would harm the nice graphics. Lucky to find a St Vincent DePaul open on Sundays. Must be heathens running the store.
 
Yay!

Oh, Jeff.... You are going to LOVE that Coffeemaster! I know you have the unused one that was your Grandmother's... I don't know that I could bring myself to use it either.

I still can't get over the one that Robert sent me back after our gathering at my house in January.
In fact, I used it this morning... just got done washing it and putting it back on the shelf!

It makes fantastic coffee, and the "drama" when the water gets sucked up into the top half and starts bubbling is fabulous! Can't beat it!

Does this new find of yours have the screen filter or the cloth filter?

Here's a shot of mine, next to my only and favorite toaster (from you)!!

I think you gave us two of the three Osters on the top shelf, too! Hurray for vintage smalls!

~Fred

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Nice finds, Jeff!

The skillet is a nice thing for two!

The skillet is a re-badged Presto.

The cover is indeed oven safe, but I would not invert it on the surface of the skillet, except for storage.

Lawrence/Maytagbear
 
Good haul! How is the gasket on the Coffeemaster? You'll finally be able to make truly brewed coffee at home ;-)

I remember those Jiffy Skillets, I think you can cook in the glass lid - completely submersible does make using it much more carefree. It's a perfect size for eggs & bacon for two - have fun!
 
My grandmother had one of those along with her vintage Sunbeam electric skillet (the one with the long handle, "immersible up to the light") to go with them in their "RV" (a 1970 Dodge van). It was a nice unit--wide enough for a few slices of full length bacon and eggs as mentioned above.
 
Keep thrifting and you'll run out of room.........like m

I'm getting there Bobby! I didn't have to think about the Coffeemaster, but I did the skillet, until Michael finally said "oh just go buy it!" (We looked high and low for vaporizers for you too!)

The Coffeemaster appears little used, gaskets are all good and flexible. There was an instruction sheet as well which shows the model 9 Mixmaster
I have a question, it came with the screen filter, while my grandma's has the cloth filter. I made coffee with this thing this morning using the screen.
Which is correct?
The coffee is good, WAY better than Mr. Coffee!
 
Thanks for sharing your cute finds.

I think I agree that the top could be used in the oven but not for surface cooking. It looks like Pyrex and yes it is "cute".
 
Very nice finds, especially the CoffeeMaster Jeff.

I prefer the screen filter as you can rinse it off and pop it into the dishwasher then. That is what I do with mine.

YAY Fred, It makes fantastic coffee, and the "drama" when the water gets sucked up into the top half and starts bubbling is fabulous!

You can say that again, of course I call that drama period the "agitation sequence" :) I Love That!
 
The vacuum pots make the best coffee, IMHO, but the glass ones are really dramatic. Lots of action when the last bit of water gets sucked up the tube, and you can see it all. Perc-o-prince turned me on to these, as I had never seen one before in my life. He is the king of vacuum pots.
Bobby in Boston
 
The vacuum pots make the best coffee, IMHO

I agree Bobby, this mornings coffee was better tasting from the Sunbeam than what I usually get from Mr. Coffee. I still need to experiment with water levels and coffee amounts a bit, but I think this Sunbeam may become the daily driver and Mr. Coffee will go on waivers.
Who makes the glass versions of these?
Michael's comments was: "Gee with that coffeemaker you might be able to make coffee as good as Terry's"
Thanks for the compliments on the KA too, that one is a treasured possession!

Robert: what was the screen filter for originally? The instruction sheet I have does not mention it.
I do have a whole package of cloth filters that were with my Grandma's Sunbeam.
 
The glass vacuum pots offer a lot of drama, but the way the Coffee Master holds the water and grounds in contact for so much longer giving body without making the coffee too strong or bitter is very difficult to achieve in a stove top model or in the electric Cory brewers or the old electric Westinghouse vacuum brewer with the big lower bowl. Because they contain water in the lower bowl, as soon as they are removed from the heat or the heat shuts down, it stops boiling, the cooling happens quickly and the coffee returns to the lower bowl. I have tried to approximate the Sunbeam's action by moving the glass coffee maker to another surface unit (with another safety wire) that I had heated on low for a couple of minutes. There is a way to get just the right balance of heat supplied to the lower bowl so that the coffee will just steep for a while as the element cools and then it returns slowly with the body of Coffee Master coffee. Because it is not having the steam forced into it like when it is bubbling up there, it does not become too strong. This is neurotic and compulsive, but I did it before I found my first Coffee Master. I tried all sorts of filters that I found in old hardware stores so I don't know which one did this best. Maybe it was the early C-30 Sunbeam filter with the frame for the cloth and the spring-loaded hook at the bottom or maybe it was a Silex filter with the cloth over the ceramic disc.

Has anyone experimented with the Silex Any Heat stove to see what kind of heat control it gives? The fire brick construction of the heater would make a very steady and slow cooling heat source (as well as slow heating when you are waiting for the water to boil), but the heat might have to be turned down before the water rose all of the way. The Silex company's advertising always made it sound automatic, but it was not. It's amazing how much fun you can have playing with the adult things we were not allowed to touch as children.
 
Glass vacuum coffee pots are wonderful, but they are sooooo technique sensitive. I like the glass stems instead of the screens or stems with the spring. They are just so much easier to clean, and the grounds that go thru settle anyway. I still don't know if anyone could make a better pot of coffee than Terry, no matter what machine or pot is used!
Bobby in Boston
 
~It's amazing how much fun you can have playing with the adult things we were not allowed to touch as children.

LOL ROFL. LIONS AND TIGERS AND BEARS OH MY!
Well no one ever said I couldn't, but somehow they were always just out of my reach!

Terry can cook anything he wants for me at any time. I heard that that man is extremely talented. (yes yes in the kitchen too!)
 
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