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Vietnamese coffee filter set | 
| Brand: Importfood.com Category: Grocery
Buy New: $4.99
New (5) from $4.99
Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 6588
Media: Misc.
ASIN: B000ELGPAO
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Preparing delicious Vietnamese coffee is quick, easy and doesn't require much clean-up afterward. The coffee filter is stainless steel and there are three parts (filter, screw-on damper, and lid). Simply place the filter on top of a cup, so it looks like a hat. Add 2-3 teaspoons of coffee to the filter, then screw on the damper so it's snug (not tight). Shake the filter a bit to settle the coffee. Fill up the cup about 1/3 with hot water then wait 20 seconds. Unscrew the damper 2 turns and fill the cup entirely with hot water. Place the lid on and wait a few minutes until the water has dripped though. Add a spoonful (or more) of sweetened condensed milk to the cup before or after you start the process. The final result is fabulous. Printed instructions come with the filter. The filter set is made in Taiwan of stainless steel, and quality is excellent--it will last for years. We offer Vietnamese coffee as well, Simply click Other products by ImportFood.com above to view our other products. Additional images, recipes and detailed description at ImportFood.com.
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| Customer Reviews:
prefer coffee filter set without the screw top November 17, 2008 Tom (San Diego, CA USA) Ever since I came back from Vietnam, I have been using these small "French presses", or Vietnamese coffee filter sets. I bought 3 sets for one dollar (15,000 dong) in Vietnam, and soon realized that I needed more. So, I bought a few in the U.S. (local VN grocery store) and noticed that they come in different forms. This one has the screw in press, which I don't like as much as the simple press down piece that just sits on top of the ground coffee. It works great. The screw in needs to be tighten until you hit the coffee, but don't tighten too much (low drip, or no drip) and too little (too fast), but just right. I can't figure it out. It is much more difficult to remove the screw part after the coffee is done. Worse, sometimes it can be that it is screwed in too hard, so the water does not drain through, but now you can't loosen it, because the hot water covers the piece. That's why the simpler version works much better. I have never seen this construction in Vietnam either. However, there is one advantage, it is that it is sturdier and lasts longer.
Vietnamase coffee filter set August 30, 2008 Lois Moore 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This little product is just great(Vietnamase Coffee Filter set) It is just like a regular coffee press, but it makes one cup at a time.
Unique, yet ubiquitous use January 1, 2008 P. Kolarits 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
The Vietnamese styled coffee filter is really a nice bit of kit. It makes the often mundane act of drinking coffee into a ritual. While its origins are south-east Asian, its has a cosmopolitan use that is quite underrated. If you're like me and have several different blends of coffee in your home to choose from, its nice to offer guests their choice of coffee without having to make several pots to do so. You can alter the strength of the coffee by how tightly you compress the top filter in this apparatus. Thus enabling a "Lungo" or "ristretto" type of taste as you would find with espresso machines. This is however, not technically an espresso maker as espresso is made by forcing water through the ground coffee beans, while this apparatus uses gravity to distill the coffee. Many people who first experience these will be in specialty Vietnamese restaurants, offered as a traditional "Ca phe sua da" (translated "Coffee milk ice"), but you should be able to find this nice little filter at many oriental specialty shops for anywhere between $3-$4. Don't worry about manufacturer, as I have seen several, and there seems to be absolutely no difference in quality. So don't pay a high price for this item. Often, the best things are the simplest, and it doesn't get any simpler than this. It should last you decades of use.
All I want is 1 cup of coffee August 16, 2006 Grendel (San Francisco) 9 out of 9 found this review helpful
And this little gadget does the job much better than a Melitta style funnel and paper filter. If you grind your own you'll need to experiment a bit with how fine to grind and how tight to screw down the tamper, but after a few tries you should have the cup of coffee you want. I have 4 now. They are pretty cool for serving coffee when you have company. I don't think the online price is outrageous, but if you are lucky enough to live in a city with a Vietnamese market you can pick these up for $3 each.
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