The Yama 5 Cup Tabletop Vac Pot Coffee Siphon includes alcohol burner/warmer used to boil the water and activate the brewing process. The Yama 5 Cup Tabletop Vac Pot is great for after dinner coffee brewed right at the table and is ideal for restaurant use as well. "Cup" refers to Yama's idea of what a cup should be--it equals about 3-4 ounces for each cup. Directions for use: - Use a slightly finer grind of coffee, somewhere around "auto drip" however you may experiment to taste.
- Drop the washable, reusable cloth covered filter into the infussion chamber with the chain hanging down into the glass siphon tube. Pull the chain down until you can hook it to the bottom of the siphon tube.
- Fill the bottom carafe to the 5 mark with hot water and place 5 measuring spoons of coffee in top chamber.
- Fill the burner with alcohol, light the burner and place directly beneath the bottom water carafe. The water takes about 4 minutes or longer to heat. Using hot water will speed up the process.
- Once the water reaches boiling temperatures the majority of the water is siphoned through the glass tube, past the filter and into the top chamber holding the ground coffee. Keeping the burner lit and under water carafe allow about 2 minutes to brew.
- After your 2 minutes is up remove and cap the alcohol burner (heat source).
- Once the coffee starts to cool the liquid is siphoned back down into the bottom carafe. Remove the top, placing it in its convertible lid/stand, and bring the pot to the table for serving.
- Gently rock the upper carafe back and forth until it can easily be removed and placed into it's stand.
- Serve and enjoy your fresh great tasting coffee.
Although Isopropyl (Rubbing) Alcohol which is available at all drug stores can be used in the alcohol burner, Denatured Alcohol which can be purchased most hardware stores will burn hotter and help heat the water quicker. Check out DaveW's Flickr feed to follow our EspressoParts adventure brewing with the Yama 5 Cup Tabletop Vacpot. For more information Mark Prince has provided an excellent FAQ on Coffee Vacpots on Coffeekid.comThe information below was taken from Wikipedia. History
The device was invented by Loeff of Berlin the 1830's and has since been used and manufactured in many parts of the world.
Design
Design and composition of the Siphon Brewer varies but fundamentally
it consists of two connectable chambers with a filter in between and
requires a heat source to operate. The two connectable chambers made of
either heat-proof glass, metal, or plastic. The filter can be a glass
rod, cloth, paper or nylon screen.
Function
The basic principles of vapor pressure and vacuum
force are applied to extract more coffee flavor and less bitters
resulting in what's typically described as a clean, crisp, rich, and
smooth coffee.
Image

Operation
A vertical styled Siphon pot is assembled by placing the open-tubed
extended portion of the upper chamber into the mouth of lower chamber
holding water. Ground coffee is added in the upper chamber over the
filter. A heat source (open flame or electric plate/coil) under the
lower chamber heats the water, the gas pressure builds forcing hot
water to travel up the upper chamber's protrusion, through the filter,
into the upper chamber and infuses with the ground coffee. After a
predetermined time, the heat source is removed and the pressure
reverses into a vacuum state and sucks the coffee down into the lower
chamber leaving the spent coffee grounds on the upper chamber. The
apparatus is usually disassembled to pour the coffee into cups. |