Coffee maker combining steeping with drip-filtering
"System Büttner" coffee makers (German: Büttner-Kaffeemaschine[1]) have been a type of manual and semi-automatic coffee makers combining coffee steeping (infusion, full immersion) with drip-filtering (percolation).
Overview
The idea to combine steeping with drip-filtering was utilized by the Berlin-based coffee roaster Carl Artur Büttner (also written as Carl Arthur Büttner)[nb 1] in his 1926 invention of a manual zero-bypassflat bottom coffee maker consisting of four parts, all made out of porcelain: a filter pot (Filtergefäß / Oberteil, "O") with lid (Deckel, "D"), saucer (Ablaufteller / Unterteil, "U") and coffee pot (Kaffeekanne, "K").[2][3][4][5][6][7] The filter pot featured a through-glazed porcelain filter with triangularly-arranged slits with some air space below. The captured hot air causing mild micro-turbulences on the underside of the coffee grounds were said to help avoid clogging. Steeping was achieved utilizing a valving mechanism stopping the flow through the filter by a specially designed rotatable saucer with a single hole,[8][9][10][11][12] which had to be positioned between the filter pot and the coffee pot so that the hole was initially closed and was manually opened when the coffee had been steeping for three to five minutes.[2][13] Once released, it then took between three[13] to six minutes for the coffee to drip through the meanwhile settled coffee bed into the coffee pot,[2] a method sometimes also called cake filtration.
Marketed since spring 1927[5][6] and up into, at least, the 1940s, these coffee makers were available as stand-alone devices for home use, but were also adopted by various other German coffee roasters (including Maschinenfabrik Bremen (Bremen, Germany),[14][15] Georg Schrader & Co. aka Geschraco (Bremen, Germany), Ferd + Eichhorn [de] (Braunschweig, Germany), Heimbs & Sohn Co. [de] (Braunschweig, Germany) and Columbus (Germany)) as part of larger coffee machines produced by the porcelain manufacturer Bauscher [de] (Weiden, Germany) for heavy-duty semi-continuous batch use in restaurants and canteens. The Büttner extraction method was boldly marketed claiming to be the world's best moka and coffee filter ("Der beste Mokka- und Kaffeefilter der Welt").[2]
The properties were said to be:
100% porcelain, no contact with metal, enamel, or paper impacting the taste[2]
Full aroma, claimed to have up to 30% increased extraction efficiency (also called "Kaffeesparmaschine"), thereby reducing costs[2]
Reduced amount of oily components and caffeine in finished coffee (will be floating on top of the water column in filter pot and claimed to be filtered out by settled coffee bed, a method sometimes called cake filtration)[2]
Possibility to draw coffee from the coffee pot even before the coffee preparation process has been finished (just by temporarily opening the valve to draw a cup of coffee and then closing it again)[2]
May need preheating of the porcelain due to longer than normal extraction time[2]
Thürmer coffee maker, an earlier type of coffee brewer combining steeping and drip-filtering utilizing a different type of slitted porcelain filter sieve
^The original company was founded in 1903 by Hugo Büttner (sen.) in Halberstadt, Germany. In 1919, his brother Wilhelm "Willi" Büttner joined the company forming Gebrüder Büttner. Carl Artur Büttner (aka Carl Arthur Büttner), a relative, founded an independent Berlin-based subsidiary of the company in December 1925. It was located at Wittenbergplatz, Bayreuther Straße 34 in Berlin. In 1933, Rolf Büttner founded another subsidiary in Halle, Germany. The company C. A. Büttner OHG was founded in 1934. During World War II, the company site in Halberstadt was destroyed in a bombing raid in 1945. The Büttner Kaffee-Handelsgesellschaft mbH (now located in the Western part of Berlin) filed for insolvency in 1961 after the erection of the Berlin Wall and was taken over by the Bremen-based Gebrüder Westhoff Kaffeerösterei [de] between 1968 and 1974. In 1965, the Halle-based business was dissolved when Rolf Büttner joined his brother Hugo Büttner (jun.) trying to rebuild their father's company site in Halberstadt, however, Hugo Büttner (jun.) died in 1971 and the company was expropriated [de] by the GDR in 1972.
^ ab"Büttner Kaffee" [Büttner coffee]. museum-digital deutschland (in German). Berlin, Germany: Stefan Rohde-Enslin. 2020-06-07 [2019-02-10, 2012]. Archived from the original on 2024-01-02. Retrieved 2024-01-21. [5][6]
^ abVelten né Rudzinski, Tom (2018). "Historie der Gebrüder Büttnerkaffeeröstereien" [History of the Büttner brothers coffee roasters]. Written at Celle, Germany. Im Kalten Krieg [In the Cold War]. Bankgeflüster: Realitäten nahe gebracht (in German). Vol. 3 (1 ed.). Berlin, Germany: epubli. pp. 30–38. ISBN978-3-746743-19-6. (251+3 pages)
^"Büttner Kaffee - Grossrösterei Thee Import - Berlin W 30 am Wittenbergplatz" [Büttner coffee - roastery & tea import - Berlin W 30 at Wittenbergplatz]. Allgemeine Fragen zur Geschichte Berlins (in German). Berlin, Germany: Die Geschichte Berlins - Verein für die Geschichte Berlins e.V., gegr. 1865. 2018-07-30 [2009-07-17]. Archived from the original on 2024-01-01. Retrieved 2024-01-21.
^Büttner, Carl Artur (1929-03-29) [1928-07-27, 1926-11-09]. "Coffee percolator". Berlin, Germany: United States Patent Office. Patent No. 1706771. Retrieved 2024-02-24. [7][8]> (4 pages) (NB. The patent erroneously classifies the Büttner coffee maker as a so-called coffee percolator, although it isn't working as a percolator. It is using a mix of infusion (full immersion) and percolation.)
^ abcdePorzellan-Fabriken Gebr. Bauscher, Weiden[in German]; Lorenz Hutschenreuther A.-G., Selb[in German], eds. (1935–1940). "Kaffee und Tee - Die Zubereitung" [Coffee and tea - The preparation]. Written at Weiden, Germany & Selb, Germany. Bürgerliches Kochbuch - Erprobt und bewährt - 900 Rezepte und Abhandlungen, 32 Kunstdrucktafeln und 60 Illustrationen im Text [Bourgeois cookbook - Tried and proven] (in German). Vol. II (print run 125–137 thousands, 6 ed.). Berlin (W 62), Germany: Verlags- und Druckerei-Gesellschaft "Der neue Lebensstil". pp. 222, 287–292. pp. 289–290: […] Eine weitere sehr gute Zubereitungsart ist diejenige unter Verwendung der Bauscher [de] Mokka- und Kaffeemaschine (Patent Büttner). Die Ablaufplatte A wird auf die Kaffeekanne B gesetzt. Darauf kommt das Brüh- und Filtergefäß C, und zwar so, daß der Henkel desselben genau über dem Henkel der Kaffeekanne steht. Nun fülle man das Filtergefäß zu einem Drittel mit kochendheißem Wasser, schütte den grießkörnig gemahlenen Kaffee auf und gieße sofort hinterher ein weiteres Drittel kochendheißes Wassers nach. Mit dem Deckel D schließt man das Filtergefäß C ab. Nun lasse man drei Minuten ziehen und gieße nach dieser Zeit das letzte Drittel kochendheißes Wassers auf, um weitere zwei Minuten ziehen zu lassen. Durch diese letztere Maßnahme ist ein Verstopfen des Siebes ausgeschlossen und ein rascher Ablauf gewährleistet. […] Nach Beendigung des Ziehprozesses genügt eine einfache Drehung des Filtergefäßes nach rechts oder links, ohne dasselbe dabei zu heben, und das Filtern beginnt. In etwa drei Minuten ist der Ablauf beendet. Brüh- und Filtergefäß C wird alsdann abgehoben, die Ablaufplatte A von der Kaffeekanne B entfernt und dafür der Deckel D auf die Kanne B gesetzt. […]{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link) (3 of c. 351 pages in total for both volumes)