Norwegian egg coffee (family size)
10 cups water
1/2 cup This is Most Certainly Brew Coffee grounds
1 egg
1/4 cup water
Directions
Bring 10 cups of water in a kettle to a boil on the stovetop. Combine coffee grounds, egg and 1/4 cup water in a bowl. Add egg/coffee mixture to the boiled water. Boil 2-3 minutes. Remove from heat and add 1 cup of cold water. (This will settle the coffee grounds to the bottom of the kettle) Serve hot.
Swedish Egg Coffee Howard Ball, ChurchLIFE,
water 10-12 cup
regular-grind coffee 1 cup
egg 1
ice cold water 1 cup
Bring water to a boil and remove from heat. In a small bowl, mix coffee and egg. Add a little hot water to coffee and egg mixture, then pour mixture into hot water. Stir and heat until it comes to a rolling boil. Remove from heat and pour in 1 cup of ice cold water. Let set for 10 minutes before serving. (The egg and grounds settle to the bottom, leaving the coffee a dark honey color.)
RECIPE BY: San Marcos Sunshine
I'm a former Minnesota kid who grew up surrounded by "Lutheran Women Who Cook" (in the church basement) for showers, weddings and funerals. There's even a cookbook available with a similar title. This is the way I recall the ladies making coffee in huge enamel pots, and it's the clearest, most flavorful coffee you'll ever enjoy. I outgrew their 10,000 Jello and Miracle Whip recipes a long time ago, but I fondly remember the Lutheran Church Basement (aka Swedish) Egg Coffee.
Ingredients
1 egg
1 cup cold water, divided
1 cup regular grind coffee
6 cups boiling water
Directions
1Use a graniteware (enamel) coffee pot.
2Wash egg; break it into a small bowl, reserving shell, and beat slightly. Add 1/2 cup cold water, the 1 cup ground coffee and the reserved egg shell, crushed. Mix thoroughly. Turn into coffee pot; pour on boiling water, and stir. (I remember the ladies adding the coffee/egg mixture directly to the boiling water.) Optional: The spout of the pot can be stuffed with soft paper towel to prevent escape of the fragrant aroma. Place on front of range and boil 3 minutes. If not boiled, coffee is cloudy. If boiled too long, too much tannic acid is developed. Add remaining 1/2 cup cold water; which perfects clearing. Cold water, which is heavier than hot, sinks to the bottom and carries the grounds with it. After coffee has settled, serve at once.
Recent comments
2 days 13 hours ago
4 days 13 hours ago
4 days 16 hours ago
4 days 17 hours ago
5 days 6 hours ago
5 days 21 hours ago
6 days 7 hours ago
1 week 1 day ago
1 week 1 day ago
1 week 3 days ago