I lived in Spain for a summer about six years ago though the BGSU study abroad program with La Universidad de Alcala de Henares. Great program, great city. Anyhoo, while I was there one of the only Spanish epicurean interests that stood out to me was the coffee. The food sucked for the most part - tapas there are not what you think. But the coffee...my God the coffee. Now, I've always liked my coffee black, and as strong as possible. If you knew where to look in Spain, you could find the darkest, blackest, thickest coffee you could imagine, most of it made with a press. Since then, I have been looking for a way to replicate that coffee without dropping a couple of hundred dollars on a Euro-style press (even if I was a millionaire I wouldn't spend that kind of money on coffee.
Fast forward to last night, I was doing some random searches on Wikipedia, as I often do when I'm bored, and came across something called a Bialetti Moka Express:
http://www.amazon.com/Bialetti-Express- ... -1-catcorr" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
After some research about it, it became apparent that it might be exactly what I have been hoping to find for a long time. I was able to pick one up at Bed Bath & Beyond today, and WOW is it good. It is a pretty neat contraption in it's own right, too. I suppose it may be something like a percolator, although I've never used one, but it actually forces water brought to a boil up through the coffee grounds, resulting in an espresso-like, extremely think coffee. I had never heard of the Moka before last night, but apparently it is very big in Italy (where it's from) and Spain, and has been around since the 1930's.
Honestly, I have no idea how well-known this thing might be, but it is very new to me and I thought I might share it for anyone else who likes their coffee strong. I've never been into the whole latte/cappuccino scene, but I do looooooove some black, black coffee.




