Coffee
South Indian Filter Coffee Is Like No Coffee You’ve Had Before
Filter kaapi is an integral part of southern Indian food culture—it's also the best part of my day.
Photo by Ministry of Kaapi
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33 Comments
DeShaunda E.
January 18, 2021
Thank you for intruducing this. I've not heard of it. I love coffee and was excited to read this. I can tell it brings great memories fo you and that makes it even better, I am sure!
Lorrie H.
January 18, 2021
I'd never heard of filter coffee before today. It sounds delicious and I hope I can try it if I find all the right tools. I love America with all the different cultures and what they bring to our tables! Your story was wonderful too and brought back memories of sitting with my own father as a child sneaking coffee while he did the crossword.
Arati M.
January 18, 2021
Thank you for your kind words. I still steal my dad’s breakfast sometimes when he’s engrossed in the crossword!
Georgia S.
January 18, 2021
Your coffee filter device and long drip time seem very similar to Vietnamese coffee.
George A.
January 17, 2021
Very “mellow” story with a bit of history, a bit of how-to and dripping with personal memories. Thoroughly enjoyed reading this well written piece while sipping my Keurig-made cup of coffee. It takes 30sec but I spend the other 29 ½ minutes reading the “papers”.
Meisha-ann M.
January 17, 2021
Thank you for this! When I visited Chennai, I went gaga over filter coffee. I knew it was special and talked about it for months after my return. I loved this story about the history of it and the significance to the culture.
Arati M.
January 18, 2021
Thank you so much Meisha-ann. I hope you are able to bring this little piece of Chennai to your home someday.
Leslie
January 17, 2021
What a lovely piece about South Indian coffee drinking which reminded me somewhat of the Roman way of the individual manual espresso maker (except the hot water boils up not poured over). One caveat — ground coffee stays freshest best in an airtight dark canister on the counter. The refrigerator (or freezer) dries out the coffee essence. Great article!
Arati M.
January 18, 2021
Fair point. It might be that summers in India aren’t the best suited for retaining the freshness of the coffee if left on the counter...old habits...I’ll try leaving it out the next time I buy my stash.
lalitha
January 17, 2021
Reading this article while sipping on filter kappi on a cold morning in Pennsylvania! What a joy and way to start your day. It brings back so many nostalgic memories with family and friends! I was out stash too this year with the pandemic restricting my travel back to India on my usual Christmas break! But no worries I that kappi is traveling 7500miles soon, just so that I can have my mornings back. I will definitely check out Ministry of kappi next time I m in New York. Thanks for writing this wonderful article!
Arati M.
January 18, 2021
Lovely to think of so many of us sharing the same morning ritual even when we’re separated by miles and miles...
Panfusine
January 17, 2021
Dang it, how did I miss seeing this piece? brings back so much nostalgia, right from trudging down to the coffee board store to buy 1/2 arabic 1/2 peaberry beans, the precision of roasting the coffee beans in a cast iron wok and the indescribable aroma thereof, the filter and the occasion frantic search for a misplaced 'umbrella' - the perforated concave tamper, w/o which the decoction just would not be of the perfect strength. and sipping that heavenly brew after a couple of aerating pulls between the 'dabra' & tumbler. Uff thank you for those fragrant memories Arati Menon.
Arati M.
January 17, 2021
Hahaha the hunt for the missing umbrella—sounds familiar! It’s wonderful when your nostalgia finds resonance with others! (I write this as I drink my morning cup of kaapi)
indiestar
December 3, 2020
It's just so fantastic to see wonderful South Indian traditions being shared with the world in this way - love this, Arati! Also, I had no idea it was this easy - my mother-in-law who only makes coffee this way made it seem waaay more complicated!
Deepak P.
November 27, 2020
have u ever tasted Grand Aroma in www.pandurangacoffee.com
thts the max in filter coffee luxury
thts the max in filter coffee luxury
Vashti J.
November 24, 2020
I am from Trinidad with Asian roots. I never knew what the caste system meant and still means although illegal. Laws cannot eradicate centuries of practice and thinking. Thank you for sharing personal experiences everyone. Reading, sharing, learning, so we understand. Now to the Kaapi. Intriguing. Now I must investigate. Onward.
Baldev
November 23, 2020
All this years they hid it so well. That special Mamaa ( Tamil Uncle ) Kopi. The very young me in Singapore and this delicious kaapi held fond memories. Stumbled on your article and now I know the secret of my Mamaa kaapi. Gotta get to Ministry of Kaapi. Will it beat my espresso machine, will nostalgia and delicious baarfi like bitter sweet kaapi win out. Me thinks so. Thank you for the walk down memory lane. Thankfully I grew up not knowing what caste system was. Trip to India in my teens was a shocker. I am still very very disappointed in otherwise a beautiful trip. My so called Jatt class ( higher class ) were simply landowners with many having to work their fields, yet somehow felt they were better than others. So lame. Now where’s my kaapi.
Arati M.
November 24, 2020
Barfi-like kaapi. Love that description, Baldev. I was, like you, protected from the ravages of the caste system, but it is important to me that we don’t forget the history of these everyday practices, no matter how uncomfortable...
Anusha J.
November 22, 2020
Thank you for this wonderful article. I’m a South Indian as well and have such strong memories of ‘kaapi’. Also, thanks for noting the troubled origins of the humble yet, now, controversial ‘tumbler and davara’. I grew up being told never to sip directly from the ‘tumbler’ in anyone’s house (probably because we were from the so-called lower rungs of the ladder). I never registered the ‘why’, until now, and I’m shocked to know the history. Never again! I’m going to sip with pride, and rightfully so.
Arati M.
November 23, 2020
Thank you for sharing this, Anusha—and a little piece of your own personal history. "I'm going to sip with pride"—I love this so much.
Baldev
November 23, 2020
Sip to your hearts content. Early 80s on my trip to India I cried. Reading your comment above I had tears in my eyes yet joy at the same time. We will all sip from the ‘tumbler’ and Kaapi it will be.
Anusha J.
November 24, 2020
Arati and Baldev, thank you for those kind words. Another 'kaapi' store I recently found, although haven't yet personally tried, is Madras Kaapi (https://www.madraskaapi.com/). They're based out of Canada and are run by a husband-wife team who are crazy for 'kaapi' just like us and many others around the world. If you guys do try them out, let me know. I am going to run out of my stash and am still vetting out options to splurge this holiday season rather than wait until I am able to travel to India.
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