I think about this once or twice a week and I realize I am working with one of the great inventions of the 20th Century.
We have to back to about the 9th Century when someone in Ethiopia discovered coffee. The true story will probably never be known. But it is certain that coffee drinking went from Ethiopia to the Sufi monasteries in Yemen. By the 16th Century the complete Middle East was drinking coffee. Coffee then spread to the Italian city states, the Balkans, and the rest of Europe.
Holland was the first country in Europe to grow their own beans. The word coffee entered the English language in the 16th Century from the Dutch word “koffie.” And, of course, it became almost instantly popular in America.
I like my coffee rather strong. I use a scoop that’s slightly larger than a tablespoon. I put four of those scoops in the filter with a sprinkling of cocoa on top. Suffices for about five and one-half cups of coffee. If you don’t like strong coffee, you won’t like mine.
I remember quite well from my mother’s kitchen, my aunts’ kitchens, and my grandmother’s kitchen, that cleaning the coffee pot was a chore. My mother used this newspaper (actually The Morning Star) to drop coffee grounds into and attack the cleaning of the coffee basket with whatever she had in hand. This was before we became so dependent upon paper towels because, at that time, there were no paper towels.
I dump my old coffee grounds and cocoa into the trash, very easily. Because thanks to a coffee filter, none of the wet grounds gets into the coffee basket. Very nicely done. Great coffee, the basket is dumped, and there is no mess to clean up. I don’t suppose the coffee filter will go down as one of the all-time great inventions, but for those of us who drink coffee … and make our own, the coffee filter is just so superior. We enjoy our coffee and its flavors, and the clean-up is simple.
For those of us who drink the dark liquid that began as an invigorating brew, we can thank the paper-thin coffee filter for making our task of brewing more pleasurable. I’m reminded of that old song, “I love coffee, I love tea, I love the java jive and it loves me.”
Ronn Mott, a longtime radio personality in Terre Haute, writes commentaries for the Tribune-Star. His pieces are published online Tuesday and Thursday on Tribstar.com, and in the print and online editions on Saturday.
Opinion Columns
RONN MOTT: Simple Inventions
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MARK BENNETT: Life at face value: Mom’s simple advice still presents a valuable daily challenge
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FLASHPOINT: Again in 2013 General Assembly, middle class generally ignored
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RONN MOTT: ‘Raccoons II’
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RONN MOTT: ‘NRA Convention’
At the recent NRA Convention in Houston, Texas, where the right-wing political hot air almost lifted the convention's building off its foundation, the NRA trotted out the forever yours political dame of the right wing, Sarah Palin. Sarah did not disappoint.
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RONN MOTT: ‘Heritage gone’
The last high school I attended was being torn down just a few days ago. I didn't learn about it until I saw classmate Dick Mills on television and a display he had put together about State football championships in the middle 1930's. I began elementary school with Dick Mills. That was Matthew South Elementary School on South Sixth Street in Clinton, Indiana. After seeing Dick on TV, it dawned on me that all schools I had attended in Clinton have been torn down.
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LIZ CIANCONE: We always want more than we need
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MARK BENNETT: Should I stay or should I go?
Some have their Bill Clinton-era Cavalier packed (with the trunk bungee-ed shut), apartment cleaned (except for the fridge), and iPhone GPS locked onto the fastest route out of Terre Haute. Others are staying — until they find a better job, or because they’re starting a career here, or because this town feels like home. In each case, a new stage of life begins today.
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College Class of '13 gets a little extra advice
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RONN MOTT: Things that go bump in the night
I live in a very old house. There are all kinds of noises that occur, especially at night, or so it seems. Aside from the various creaks and pops from old wooden floors and walls when the furnace heats up and sends warm air into the rooms, we, my wife and I, have heard other noises.
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RONN MOTT: Around the dial
At lunch the other day with Terry Tevlin (First Financial Bank), I bumped into Dale Mahurin. I hadn’t talked to Dale in a long time and inquired about his wife, Julie Henricks.
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RONN MOTT: George Jones
I got to Nashville in the early ’70s, hired by John Patton, who had been a DJ for WBOW earlier in his career. Then, he was managing WMAK in Nashville and I was promised a top sales list and received the yellow pages (many a promise like this has happened to people in this business). I also did sports commentary for the morning man and would ultimately do a season of play-by-play and a short TV schedule for Tennessee State.
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LIZ CIANCONE: Old age is in email of the beholder
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FLASHPOINT: Time has arrived for overhaul of TV news
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RONN MOTT: Remembering Pat Summerall
I don’t remember how I first became aware of Pat Summerall, but the first time I heard him was on a New York radio station (WCBS, I think). He was doing the sports for the morning man and exchanging some opinions about sports and such with him.
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RONN MOTT: What I don’t know
I was watching a segment on the History Channel the other night while I waited for the end of “The Big Bang Theory” and a show I had seen before. It was “Sex in History.” And the two segments I watched were about Ben Franklin and Howard Hughes.
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RONN MOTT: You, me, and the Muslim world
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LIZ CIANCONE: A memory test from the oldtime radio days
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MARK BENNETT: Littered with irony: Why do people callously discard their trash, and who are they?
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