Economy Cuban coffee maker, Aluminum construction . 6 cup
The 6-cup aluminum cafetera is the workhorse stovetop espresso maker behind most Cuban-American kitchens — the same octagonal moka pot shape that has lived on the back burner of countless households since the exile generation set up house in Miami.
Aluminum construction, three-piece design: bottom water chamber, funnel basket for the ground coffee, top collection chamber. Six demitasse-cup yield — enough for a small family cafecito round or two generous cortaditos. Works on gas and electric stovetops. Replacement gaskets and filters are standard moka-pot sizing and easy to source.
Common Uses: Morning cafecito with whipped espumita, afternoon merienda colada to share at the office, café con leche poured over steamed milk, cortadito with a splash of evaporated milk, weekend pastelito pairings.
Cultural Context: The cafetera is the one piece of kitchen hardware almost every Cuban household owns before anything else. It outlasts toasters, blenders, and marriages. Kids learn to make cafecito on this exact pot before they learn to drive — measuring the sugar, watching for the first dark stream to whip the espumita, calling everyone to the kitchen when it's ready.
Pairs With: Café La Llave or Bustelo ground espresso, raw cane sugar for espumita, evaporated milk, and a stack of small demitasse cups.
Ships nationwide to Cuban-American households restocking the kitchen or replacing the pot that finally gave out after a decade of daily service.