This invention relates to apparatus for making espresso coffee.
Coffee is globally one of the world's most widely consumed beverages. It is normally drunk hot and it is made by extracting soluble components using hot water from so-called ground coffee, i.e. a granular powder formed by grinding roasted coffee beans. It is well-known that the taste of the coffee varies substantially, even with identical ground coffee as the starting material, depending upon the precise conditions under which the extraction is carried out. One known widely used method is to pass a relatively small quantity of hot water through a compacted block of coffee grounds under relatively high pressure in order to force the water through the block. This results in a quantity of so-called espresso coffee which is the type of coffee beverage preferred by many users.
In order to produce espresso coffee, e.g. in a café or restaurant, it is common to use for this purpose a counter-top size so-called “espresso machine”. These machines are generally provided with a plumbed-in water supply and include means for maintaining a reservoir of water at a relatively high temperature as well as complex systems for expelling a measured quantity of that hot water via a block of compressed ground coffee. That block is held tightly against a pressurised water outlet of the machine by means of a cylindrical metal pot in which the block is compressed. The block may be of loose coffee granules put into the pot (conventionally it is filled to the brim, the granules then being compressed to a smaller volume when the pot is affixed to the machine), or may be in the form of a sachet or ‘pod’ made of water-permeable material and sized to fit snugly into the pot. The pot is provided with means to hold it sealed tightly against the pressurised water outlet. Conventionally this is achieved by projections on the exterior of the pot engaging short thread portions on the interior of a skirt surrounding the outlet. The pot is usually provided with a laterally extending exterior handle enabling the pot to be screwed tightly into position by turning through around 90°. The base of the pot contains an aperture through which the coffee may pass to drop into a cup placed below the pot during dispensing, which may be bifurcated to divide the outflow into two streams each of which then drops into a cup placed below the pot.
Apparatus of this sort provided for café and restaurant use is of substantial size and usually requires plumbing into a water system and is accordingly not ideally suited for domestic use. An example of such apparatus is described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,421,014. Scaled down such apparatus for domestic use has been manufactured for many years, but such apparatus has conventionally required an electrical supply and has incorporated suitable means for generating hot water under pressure and expelling a quantity of it through the pot containing the compressed block of coffee grounds. Other attempts to make an apparatus suitable for domestic use are shown in U.S. Pat. No. 4,763,566 and GB-A-801,609. A simpler design is described in FR-A-728,361 where a cylinder containing a piston, actuated by a pair of levers, is used to force water through a grille upon which coffee grounds are located.
We have now found that, by careful design, it is possible to produce excellent espresso coffee using apparatus that is simple in operation, requires no electricity supply or permanent plumbing, and which can be produced in quantity relatively inexpensively, thus further extending the market for domestic espresso coffee-making apparatus.
According to the present invention, there is provided apparatus for making espresso coffee comprising a support frame, a vertically mounted open-topped cylinder mounted on the support frame, the frame and cylinder defining a space below the cylinder adapted to recieve a block of compressed ground coffee and below which a cup to receive the coffee may be inserted, means for locating adjacent the base of the cylinder a quantity of ground coffee, a piston adapted to fit in the cylinder, and an actuation means linked to the piston enabling the piston to be moved up and down in the cylinder by the actuation means, wherein associated with the piston is a means for enabling water to pass the head of the piston as the piston is raised within the cylinder by the actuation means.
A variety of actuation means can be envisaged, for example, mutually engaging throughthreads on a piston shaft and on a bore located at the top of the cylinder through which the shaft extends. Alternatively, pneumatic pressure such as with an inflation bag could be used to actuate the piston.
The preferred actuation means are a pair of levers pivoted to the frame and pivotally linked to the piston. Such levers may be geared together to promote even pivotal movement thereof.
Preferably the levers are mounted 180° apart relative to the axis of the cylinder and movable from an elevated position in which the piston is located at or near the top of the cylinder to a lowered position in which the piston abuts the base of the cylinder.
The most convenient way of locating the compressed granules adjacent the base of the cylinder is to use a standard pot, e.g. bayonet fitted to the support frame, though the apparatus may be configured with a suitable sachet or ‘pod’ receptacle instead, e.g. hingeable down to enable insertion of a fresh sachetpod and swivellable up and clippable in position to hold the sachet/pod compressed against the underside of the cylinder.
To use the preferred form of such apparatus, the user first places a quantity of ground coffee in a pot which may be one of the standard conventional designs with one or more outlets to direct coffee into one or more cups. The pot is then fitted underneath the cylinder in conventional fashion and the desired number of cups are placed beneath it. The cylinder is then filled with hot water and the hot water then expressed from the cylinder by means of the piston actuated by moving the two levers. The movement of the levers is under the control of the user and can be controlled accordingly to expel the hot water from the cylinder through the block of compressed ground coffee relatively slowly at a relatively low pressure, or relatively fast at a considerably higher pressure. The taste of the resulting coffee differs and accordingly the user can operate the apparatus to suit his or her taste.
In operation, as noted above, the cylinder is first filled to the desired extent with hot water above the piston. The piston is then raised and the water passes the piston head to collect in the lower region of the cylinder, e.g. via a one-way valve mechanism mounted in the piston. Such a valve should be easy to operate, easy to clean, and capable of withstanding the substantial back pressure exerted as the hot water in the cylinder is expelled under pressure through the compressed block of ground coffee.
In a particularly preferred embodiment, this valve mechanism is provided by constructing the piston with an axially movable seal ring located between the exterior periphery of the piston and the internal cylindrical wall of the cylinder, the seal ring being held captive between a pair of axially spaced flanges on the piston, the axial spacing between the flanges exceeding the axial dimension of the seal ring, and the arrangement being such that when the seal ring is adjacent the lower flange of the piston, flow channels formed in the piston are open and wherein those flow channels are closed when the seal ring is adjacent the upper flange.
It is found that this is a particularly simple and effective way of providing a valve in the piston, particularly when the seal ring is a resilient o-ring compressed between the exterior of the piston and the interior wall of the cylinder. As the piston is raised within the cylinder, the o-ring rolls to lie adjacent the lower flange opening the flow channels and enabling water above the cylinder to flow through them into the increasing volume between the end of the cylinder and the rising piston. When the piston is moved downwards, the ring rolls to lie adjacent the upper flange and to seal the exterior periphery of the piston tightly against the internal cylindrical wall of the cylinder, thus allowing the application of pressure to the water in the cylinder to express it through the compressed block of ground coffee.
Preferably the linkage between the piston and the levers or other actuation mechanism is easily and quickly dismountable so that the piston may be removed entirely from the cylinder to enable it to be cleaned. The cylinder may also be easily dismounted from the support frame, for like purposes.
Other features and advantages of the invention will become clear from the explanation of a particular preferred embodiment of apparatus according to the invention which is shown by way of example in the accompanying drawings. In those drawings:
Referring to the drawings, the apparatus consists generally of a base plate 1 on which is mounted a main body portion 2 in the form of generally arched shape having two downward legs attached to either end of the generally oval base plate 1 and having at its upper end a cylindrical collar 4 into which is fitted an upwardly open cylinder 3. Mounted to the collar 4 are two actuation levers 6, 7, each of which consists as shown in the drawing of an arm which bifurcates into two shorter arms, each shorter arm having an aperture 8 near its free end. The free ends of the shorter arms of levers 6, 7 are relieved to receive one of four apertured plates 11, 13 each of which has an arcuate toothed edge. Each plate 11, 13 is held adjacent the facing ends of the shorter arms by a collet 31, which collets can be assembled to the arms and plates straightforwardly, whereafter the ends of the levers 8 carrying plates 11, 13 and collets 31, can be slipped over four cylindrical posts 10 on the collar 4, bringing apertures 8 into line with apertures in each post 10. The toothed plates 11, 13 and the levers 6, 7 are held captive and pivoted on to collar 4 by means of four fixing screws 12 which pass through apertures 8 and into posts 10, with each plate 13 then meshing with a plate 11, so linking the pivotal movement of levers 6 and 7 together.
Adjacent the bifurcation in each of levers 6 and 7 is a slot 15 which is adapted to receive one end of a linkage arm 16. Each of the two identically shaped arms 16 is held pivoted in slot 15 by virtue of a pin (not shown in the drawings) which passes through a transverse bore 18 in each of levers 6 and 7 and a hole 19 at the lower end of each arm 16, and two spacer washers 32 either side of hole 19.
The upper ends of arms 16 are cut away to one side, the remainder being pivotally connected with the upper end of a plunger assembly generally denoted 21 in
When the apparatus is assembled as shown in
Piston head 22 is sized so as to enable it to be easily moved up and down in cylinder 3, by moving the levers 6 and 7. In order to seal the outside of the piston head 22 to the interior wall of the cylinder 3, the piston head 22 bears an external o-ring which is shown in the drawings only in
As shown most clearly in
When the o-ring 40 is adjacent lower flange 41, there are spaces accordingly enabling water to pass between the side of the piston and the wall of cylinder 3 through apertures 47 and into the space below piston head 22. When the piston is lowered, however, o-ring 40 moves to lie against upper flange 42, thus constituting a complete seal around the entire periphery of the piston head 22, so enabling water to be expressed under pressure from cylinder 3. In order to assist the flow of water downwardly past the piston head 22 as it is raised within cylinder 3, the upper edge of the piston head 22 is relieved by a set of notches 49.
As shown in the exploded diagram in
In order to maintain a good seal, an o-ring 9 is located between the base of cylinder 3 and the upper face of a rubber perforated diaphragm 50. The diaphragm 50 is held in place by a locking ring 52 held in place by bolts passing through four lugs and screwed upwardly into sockets in collar 4. Ring 52 which has two cutouts at the ends of two internal spiral ramp sections 54, constituting, with the conventional projections on the side of a standard pot, a bayonet-type connection. The rubber perforated diaphragm 50 acts as a seal between the base of cylinder 3 and the upper edge of a conventional handled pot for containing a portion of ground coffee. The pot may be swivelled to rotate the pot about its axis in a first direction such that the standard projections on the exterior of the pot engage the spiral ramp sections 53. This brings the upper edge of the pot into contact with the lower face of diaphragm 50 and accordingly seals the cylinder 3 against the pot. The pot may easily be removed by rotating it about its axis, in the opposite direction, until the projections disengage with the ramp sections 54 so freeing the pot and enabling used coffee grounds to be discarded. In addition, the diaphragm 50 also serves to prevent coffee grounds being sucked from the pot into the bottom of the cylinder 3 by the back pressure exerted as the apparatus is used.
Finally, base 1 has an external rim 70 to contain any spillage and on its floor a series of raised coffee bean shaped formations 71 which serve to hold a cup placed on base 1 out of contact with the upper side of base 1 and accordingly unlikely to pick up any liquid which may have dropped on to the base during use of the apparatus.
Use of the apparatus is straightforward:
First of all, a pot is filled with ground coffee either loose or in a sachet or ‘pod’ and fitted into place in conventional fashion by lifting and twisting. At this stage, the levers 6 and 7 are in their downward position, as shown in
To make another cup, the handled pot is swivelled to release it, the used grounds removed, fresh grounds inserted and the process repeated. It is quick, simple, elegant and makes an excellent cup of espresso coffee.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0212710.8 | May 2002 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/GB03/02400 | 5/30/2003 | WO |