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Uncategorized Thursday, February 3rd 2011 at 10:57 am

10 Foods You Can Allegedly Make In A Coffee Maker

Like so many before me, I was once hungry in college. With term papers looming and the dining hall already closed for the night, food had to come from somewhere. That was the night I learned to make ramen in my coffee maker. At first I was nervous, pouring the hot water over noodles in my bowl, covering them, and letting it steep. Eventually, I became more adventurous: cooking the noodles in the carafe; putting the seasoning packet in the basket that normally holds the filter; adding an egg.

This was cheap food prepared in as cheap a manner as possible. But I had touched just the tip of the iceberg. It turns out there are plenty of foods you can whip up with a Mr. Coffee and some bravery. Our favorites are below. Keep in mind that when cooking with unconventional methods, you run the risk of producing sub-par food and maybe exposing yourself to the dangers of undercooked food. Attempt at your own risk, read with an open mind.

1. Oatmeal

Put two packets of instant oatmeal into the carafe. Add an individual packet of honey, an individual packet of fruit jam, and a pinch of salt. Put an herbal tea bag (e.g. orange flavored) into the filter basket. Pour 8-10 ounces of water into the coffee maker, turn on the machine, and the oatmeal will be ready in about 5 minutes.

A dead simple recipe, but with the twist of adding a tea bag for flavor. Clearly, whoever wrote this coffee maker recipe is a stone-cold pro. He’s been there, he’s seen things, he’s lived to tell about it, and he needs some orange flavored oatmeal to do it.

2. Broccoli

Fill a coffee filter with six broccoli florets. Load into the coffee maker. Run six cups of water through for tender but still crisp veggies.

Clever coffee maker cooks will find a way to whip up a cheese sauce to go with this. When you’re cooking in a coffee maker, health food is the least of your concern.

3. Rice

Put 1/2 cup of instant rice per person in the coffee maker. Run the appropriate amount of water (check the box for instructions) through the coffee maker, then leave the machine turned on for 5 to 10 minutes until the rice is fully cooked.

Rice cookers are for squares.

4. Soft Boiled Eggs

Place the eggs in the coffee pot. Drip hot water over them. Let them cook for a few more minutes.

Several commenters observed that if it is possible to poach eggs in a coffee maker, other foods could easily be poached. Fruit in warm wine or bologna were also recommended.

5. Lemon Pepper Chicken

Place chicken breast in coffee maker. Add enough water to cover about 1/4 of chicken. Sprinkle with lemon pepper seasoning. Turn on maker and cook about 15 min per side. Add milk and butter to remaining liquid, allow to heat for about a minute, and add potato flakes for a quick side of mashed potatoes.

I know what you’re thinking: the thought of cooking meat in a something as low-powered as a coffee maker is completely unappealing. However, Gizmodo adapted this recipe for couscous and chicken and recorded the results. Of note is their choice of side dish, which would probably cook up better than mashed potato flakes, and their advice about steaming vegetables in the chamber that normally holds the coffee grounds. Also, they note that while the chicken does not brown, it does cook well enough.

6. Chicken Pesto Pasta

A bit of a riff on the classic “ramen in the coffee pot,” this clever recipe has you cook thin-cut chicken breasts on the heating element, cook the noodles in the carafe, then whip up a quick pesto in a coffee grinder.

A coffee grinder is a solid hack to make the fresh basil pesto sauce — olive oil, pine nuts, salt, pepper, garlic and the aforementioned fresh basil.

Of note is that, once again, the chicken doesn’t appear to to brown. Cooked is cooked, though. Right?

7. Fish Steaks

As mentioned above, if you can poach an egg, you should be able to do a lot more. Here’s the rundown on how to tackle a fish steak. Some commenters noted that trout would work well for this recipe.

Steaks should be approximately 3/4 inches thick to ensure even cooking. Place steak in filter and run 10 cups of water through the coffeemaker. Flip steak, and run another 10 cups of water through machine.

8. Chive and Butter Sauce

Not a meal on its own, but you’ll need something to go with that fish, rice, chicken, or veggies.

Dice one small shallot into the coffee maker. Load two to four sprigs of fresh thyme into the filter basket without a filter, then run 1 cup of cream and 1 teaspoon of lemon juice through the coffee maker together. Season with salt and pepper, and allow the sauce to reduce over the hot plate for 15 to 20 minutes. Just before serving, add 1 tablespoon diced butter and swirl to melt. (Note: Coffee maker will require heavy cleaning afterward.)

Recipes 3, 4, and 8 come from a larger article on how to prepare a meal in your hotel room, which contains such pearls of wisdom as recommending you use a safety razor to sprinkle black truffle shavings over your finished meal. Genius.

9. Chocolate Fondue

The perfect dessert for your shifty, coffee-maker meal.

5 2.6 oz. dark chocolate candy bars, broken into small pieces

1 cup of whipping cream

2 bananas, sliced

1 apple, sliced

1 basket of strawberries, whole

Pour cream in glass decanter and heat for 15 minutes. Add broken candy bars to cream and heat for 10 minutes. Stir to create a smooth, rich sauce. Heat for an additional 5 minutes, then remove decanter from heat source. Spear fruit with forks and dip in chocolate sauce to coat. Serves three.

10. Beer

This sounds insane, but bear with us. Southern Fried Science has produced the definitive article on “how to brew beer in a coffee maker, using only materials commonly found on a modestly sized oceanographic research vessel.” They recommend using cereals for grains, vegemite for malt, and seaweed for hops. Amazing.

  1. Grind up your ‘grains’ (but not so much that it becomes powder).
  2. Place your ‘grains’ in coffee pot (not the filter basket, the carafe).
  3. Run 2 cups of clean water through coffee maker and let it sit on the hot plate for an hour. This releases all the good chemicals from you ‘grains’ and creates a fluid called wort.
  4. Strain the wort through the coffee filter and place the filter full of ‘grain’ into the filter basket. Add the ‘malt’ to the filter basket. Pour the strained liquid back into coffee maker and add 1 cup of water.
  5. Run the wort through the coffee maker 5 times, each time adding 1 cup of water.
  6. Pour the wort into the saucepan and boil for 45 minutes. Two minutes before boiling is done, add the hops.
  7. Carefully pour the wort into the canning jars.
  8. Let the wort cool to between 60 and 70 F. Once it is cool enough to touch the outside of the jars without burning, pitched the Bakers’ Yeast into the mixture.
  9. Seal jar with a handkerchief and rubber band over the mouth, and let sit for 3 to 5 days.
  10. And table spoon of sugar to the jar and seal with the lids, making sure they’re air tight.
  11. Store in a cool, dark place where it will not be disturbed for a week.

So the next time you’re in a hotel and reaching for the phone and steeling your nerves to fork over $30 for a crappy pizza, go for the coffee maker instead. And if you’re willing to throw the clothes iron in to the mix, it opens up all sorts of possibilities. Now go out there, and cook some dinner in the most backward way imaginable.

(image via briefpenguin)

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  • Senor Chang

    Wow.

    Um.

    NO.

    If I taint my ‘maker with the grease of chickens and odor of broccoli, it will deprive me of the thing I need most: COFFEE!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Anyone caught attempting any of the above in my house will be dragged outside have their hands forced under a running weed whacker.

  • Anonymous

    But if you don’t taint your ‘maker with the grease of chickens and odor of broccoli, then you’ll never be able to experience Chicken and Broccoli Coffee.

  • Ron Palmer

    Hmmmm….. My broccoli and Chicken Pesto Pasta taste like coffee. :)

    I think I’m gonna try brewing the beer… just because.

  • Captain Hobo

    You forgot hobo chili.

    Ingredients:
    An onion, a shoelace, and a Mr. Coffee

  • Pks29733steel

    Why bother using the ‘coffee maker’. You can buy ‘USB’ microwave ‘ovens’ (actually, you can cook a ‘cup of soup’, coffee, tea, or anything that you can place in a large coffee cup!) for around $100 bucks. You will never have to bother with a ‘break-room kitchen’ or worry about your lunch being stolen. All you need is your food, a bottled water (save the earth, reuse the bottle) and the mini ‘microwave’!!

  • http://www.facebook.com/amedeus8 Nick Gotshall

    We cooked ramen in one at a convention once.

  • bizzle

    Cool story bro.

  • Beermonstr24

    he said taint

  • http://twitter.com/CuppaJo_ATX April CuppaJo Burba

    Hot dogs. Place dogs in coffee basket. Brew a full pot. Serve on buns placed over the top for steam.

  • jumphead

    Can you write an article on things that can be cooked between a fat woman’s thighs?

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1426677253 Robert Elsenpeter

    You’ll make a beer grenade if you seal a glass jar with active yeast. It will esplode.
    But if you try this, put some time lapse camera on it for us. It’ll be cool to see it go “boom!”

  • poormet

    you can grill tuna on the heating element of a coffeemaker. check out Poormet: Cooking with Chad: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zWe7802aUxQ

  • jumphead

    That didn’t impress you?

    Okay, we cooked a coffee pot at a ramen convention, twice.

  • jumphead

    And by, “We” I mean there was 500, no 10 million of us each with hand on another’s crotch and the other hand on something involved in the cooking. It was pure teamwork, my fizzle.

  • Linuxelf

    Quick note about the beer making. What’s actually happening when you’re soaking the grain for an hour isn’t “releasing the chemicals.” What you’re doing is holding the grain at an appropriate temperature for the enzymes naturally found in grain to start breaking down the starches into sugars. These sugars are what are eaten by the yeast to produce your alcohol and CO2. I’ve never thought of using a coffee maker to make beer before, mostly because it would make such a small amount, but it sounds fun. May have to give it a try.

  • aberline

    Cooking brocolli by running hot water over it will strip out all the nutrients. You would be better off using the carafe to steam the brocolli.

  • Anonymous

    Instant anything sucks. Cooked in a coffeemaker or not.

  • wow I can read

    umm you are sealing it with a handkerchief… so fabric and an elastic band, no explosions. Although really I think the explosion might be more fun that crap beer.

  • Revelveteen

    How about a fat guy’s thighs? Plenty of those around too, ya know.

  • Revelveteen

    Ha ha….no matter what you make in there, it will still taste of coffee. Reminds me of my 2 college specialties: Hot Dogs in a Toaster [slice 'em in half to fit] & Coffee in a Sock, at first done by tying it to the bathtub faucet & running the hot water through & later on, soaking it in an electric frypan. I dubbed it ‘Dead Sock Soup.’

  • jgarfink

    The oatmeal recipe comes from Alton Brown. Dude’s awesome.

  • Anonymous

    too true, and how about the ’20′ cups of water over the fish? no mercury left!

  • Anonymous

    too true, and how about the ’20′ cups of water over the fish? no mercury left!

  • ShutTheFiskUp

    Yeah, no. Anything I’ve ever tried making with a coffee pot other than coffee tasted like coffee. Ick.

  • Baden

    I actually have a Hot Dog toaster. It has two holes for hot dogs, and two slots for buns. Convenient.

  • Baden

    Bonus: Make perfect scrambled eggs with an espresso steamer (google for instructions, but is used by several restaurants).

  • Rob

    Last hotel I stayed at, the coffee maker in the room smelled of mildew. No thanks!

  • HeMenWomenHaters

    Ill make sure to remember these recipes for the next time I end up in prison.

  • Just Floyd

    Im just going to point out to the window lickers….why not buy a spare coffee maker for these adventurous meals. Cheap ones at Walmart go for less than $20. and besides you need the real coffee maker in the morning to make your coffee while your eggs cook in the other one.

  • Scott Lahti

    I lived in motel rooms off and on, and found my solution in stopping at the local Goodwill and picking up a used electric skillet for about $3-4, or, in one case, an electric wok, lid included, priced at $2.99 and then marked down at the register to $1.49 on green-tag day. In the wok, I made chicken, pork, vegetables, pasta, rice, soup, stew, chili, coffee, tea, open-faced sandwiches with melted cheese, frozen pizza (cut in half), and bread from frozen dough.

  • Anonymous

    Problem is, your dorm doesn’t allow an electric skillet or electric wok, it does allow an electric coffeepot. Maybe. Depending where you go to school and what dorm you live in.

    Some dorms even have reasonable kitchens. Amazing. Still wouldn’t make beer there.

  • http://twitter.com/merulian Merissa Tse

    Interesting, but rice cookers are totally not for squares. They’re even more awesome for thinking-out-of-the-box cooking. Things I have made in my rice cooker:

    scrambled eggs
    a two layer cake
    bread
    rice (obviously)
    ramen
    all types of pasta
    basically any type of boxed dinner (sidekicks, uncle ben’s rice, Kraft Dinner, etc)

    I’m sure I could do a lot more, too. The best thing about a rice cooker is that it’s easier to access the top of the cooking vessel than a coffee maker, it gets hot enough to cook pretty much anything, but isn’t capable of burning it because of its settings.

  • Katja

    1000 more things..
    http://kaffekokarkokboken.blogg.se/ (try google translate)

    Best regards
    Katja – “Coffe pot chef “(in swedish “Kaffekokarkock)

  • http://searchingforspice.wordpress.com Corina

    If only I had a coffee maker…

  • Grant250

    You can also feed your infant with a coffee maker. Just put milk where the water usually goes and place your baby under the dripping portion of the machine and feel free to walk away and check email or surf blogs for a few hours.

  • Bax Baxtersmaster

    You can also take chunks of tilapia fillets and place in pot. Use half can of cream of shrimp soup. Mix. Run enough water through to cover fillets and soup. Stir after “brewing” and let remain on hot plate until fish flakes with a fork. Yummy and low calorie since you are using water instead of milk in this dish. Serve with rice or steamed veggies placed in filter while brewing the water for the fish. Cut veggies in to small pieces so they are crisp tender with the reduced amount of water being used for the fish.
    Enjoy!

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=514764779 Chris Pereira

    Without your knowledge we all snuck into your house and did it anyway. Your mind, It is blown.

  • http://www.facebook.com/cadelbovo Cory Delbovo

    Just don’t reuse that bottle for anything you drink. They leech chems and breed bacteria. There’s always a recycle bin. ;p

  • http://www.facebook.com/cadelbovo Cory Delbovo

    Fruit?

  • usrnmna

    Coffee makers don’t get the water hot enough to cook anything, except brew lousy, lukewarm coffee. Why don’t you just get yourself cheap hotplate.

  • Sassafrass1231

    Loved the article. I’ve definitely been there when it comes to locking yourself in your room to cram for midterms. I’ve made ramen noodles multiple times with my electric tea kettle (like a Mr. Coffee basically). I’ll possibly consider the other recipes.
    Thanks :)

  • http://www.largepot.net Large Pot

    Just came and read, this is wow! I was seek from many blogs, but here is the best, I love it.

  • Lulu

    Fruit isn’t instant. o.O It just comes that way. ‘Instant,’ implies that you have to cook it in some way and that it will happen pretty quickly. Cooking fruit isn’t an instant process either.

  • XMalice

    The element that heats the water in coffee makers are almost all adjustable. Most times you have to take it apart and know what you’re doing to adjust it, but it’s possible. Sounds like you judged all coffee makers on one bad experience.

  • http://buyghostchili.com/ Buy Ghost Chili

    HAHA! my thoughts exactly so weird

  • http://www.doubleglazingquote.org.uk/ Double Glazing

    A good coffee maker should hold enough water for a decent amount of servings at one time. Make sure it can hold a good amount without the reservoir being too big that it takes over the machine.

  • Sippin Syrup

    Not that I would, but… interesting.

  • Gia0011

    Forget the coffee maker, just invest in a rice cooker. I’ve used one to successfully make curries, stir fries, soups, pasta, scrambled, poached and fried eggs, even pancakes. Oh, and rice.

  • Anonymous

    Versatility of an equipment! This notion is very cool and I never imagine boiling noodles in my coffee maker, very interesting topic.

    single cup coffee brewers

  • http://slowmotionpotion.com/dev/ Relaxation Beverage

    Wow. Just….wow. You sure can’t do this in a Keurig.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Terri-Stephenson/100000717863831 Terri Stephenson

    It’s also good for dorms. At my college we can’t have anything but a coffee maker. This info is useful.

  • http://www.thedan1984.com Dan

    Awesome ideas, and remember you can clean your coffee maker very easily using a little bit of vinegar!

  • Kcgovens

    This is Great i will Pass it Forward

  • Tony Medlin

    Two nails through a board, slap a hot dog on the nails, connect directly to AC current and your dogs will be cooked in seconds. Just unplug it before you touch it.
    Dr. Dick Head

  • Broke student

    Problem is a good amount of dorm rooms do not allow a rice cooker but the do allow students to have coffee makers… thus stuff like this is born

  • JuniperWalk

    I got a Keurig brewer for Christmas and was going to give away my old one. Now I have a reason to keep it! LOL!! I know a girl who makes cakes in her rice cooker. She calls it her “cake robot”. :)

  • Okieshedevil1

    I guess if you are in a motel useing their pot it is ok to put cream and such thru the pot for sauce , right come on , really ?

  • 1tinkerbell

    lol I’m a flight attendant and I heat all my meals in the coffee pot! but they are all pre made and in ziplock bags then I cover them with hot water and leave them for a while till they are nice and hot!! I also heat up meat and sandwiches on the burners, I cover them with tin foil and place right on the burners and turn!!

  • Psychokillerdudet

    you forgot the omelet on the hotplate of the maker

  • Taysty2

    Hot Dogs Too

  • Jkdmbahr

    i want to purchase but dont know the price. Warranty? consumption electricity etc. confirm. my email id is jkdmbahr @gmail.com

  • Mo

    Please, some get him a  hotplate.

  • Amanda

    I’m going to a resort with no microwaves and 24 hour room service with cheeseburger that start at 20 bucks I could use this information!

  • Swakbarbie

    I tried your hobo chili and my husband loved it! Thanks for the recipe.

  • carlee2012

    here’s a smart Idea, go to your local thrift store, get a coffee maker JUST for the food in this article.

  • Me

    Awesome. This is handy cause im staying out of town in a hotel and come on, antibacterial dish soap. Duh, now u have coffee favored coffee. Why would you not wash your coffee maker anyways. Nasty

  • a

    what temperature is in carafe during cooking? Could you try to measure it?

  • http://www.facebook.com/joseph.stracener Joseph W. Stracener

    170 deg f, well above the 140 required to kill bacteria (kills it in under 2 and a half minutes

  • Anonymous

    :)

  • barracksmarine

    ive made ramen, oatmeal, and instant grits with my coffee maker. as for the whole chiken and broccoli odor afterwards thats why you dont be a nasty and clean your crap afterwards.

  • bobbi ysmael

    OMG. THIS IS COOL I need to be able to Pinterest these Recipes. OMG. I better go out and get me a few more Coffee Makers. I’m cooking fish in the same Coffee maker I make my Coffee in. HAHAHA This is cool.