Get the best prices on Camping Cookware

Coleman Camping Coffee Maker

There is nothing more enjoyable than taking a camping trip. After spending your day in the open spaces, you are going to have a delicious supper. The brand of camp stove you bring along when you go camping will make all the difference.

Camping Pots

Coleman Camping Coffee Maker

  • Perfect for family camping weekends
  • Designed for use with 2 or 3 burner camp stoves
  • Can be used to brew up to 10 cups of drip coffee

This Coleman Camping Coffee Maker has been designed for use with 2 or 3 burner camp stoves. It can be used to brew up to 10 cups of drip coffee or other hot beverages like tea or hot chocolate.There’s nothing like a hot cup of coffee on a sleepy outdoor morning, but camping French presses and drip filters can be messy and time consuming, especially if you’re camping with a group.

 

The Coleman camping coffeemaker sits atop a Coleman 2- or 3-burner stove.

Enter the Coleman camping coffeemaker, which makes up to ten 6-ounce cups of coffee without requiring an electrical outlet. Instead, the Coleman coffeemaker sits atop a Coleman two- or three-burner camping stove, where it draws all the heat it needs to brew a delicious pot. The unit includes all the standard coffeemaker features, including a swing-out filter basket, a solid steel base, and an easy-pour decanter. The coffeemaker even offers a pause-and-serve feature, so you can interrupt the brew to pour a cup–a must for sleepy-eyed campers. The Coleman camping coffeemaker brews a full pot in roughly 10 minutes, and can be used for tea or hot chocolate as well.

About Coleman
More than 100 years ago, a young man with an entrepreneurial spirit and a better idea began manufacturing lanterns in Wichita, Kansas. His name was W.C. Coleman, and the company he founded would change life in America. A man plagued with such poor vision he sometimes had to ask classmates to read aloud to him, Coleman saw a brilliant light in 1900 in a drugstore window that stopped him in his tracks. He inquired about the light inside and discovered he was able to read even the small print on a medicine bottle by the illumination. The lamps had mantles, not wicks, and were fueled by gasoline under pressure instead of coal oil. Soon afterward, Coleman started a lighting service that offered a “no light, no pay” clause–a big step forward for merchants who were burned by inferior products that rarely worked–and drew substantial interest from businesses that wanted to keep their lights on after dark.

In the ensuing years, Coleman expanded its product line well beyond lanterns. The company’s current catalog is thick with products that make spending time outdoors a pleasure. There are coolers that keep food and drinks cold for days on end, comfortable airbeds that won’t deflate during the night, a complete line of LED lights that last for years, powerful portable grills that cook with an authentic open-grill flame, and much, much more. Coleman has truly fashioned much of our outdoor camping experience, and expects to do so for generations to come. END

Rating: (out of 33 reviews)

 

Question by meow: Do they make small battery operated coffee pots for camping?

Best answer:

Answer by N.FromVT
they make pots that hold water – you make a fire – you make some coffee.

Check out the Camping Cookware for sale in the sidebar at the left-hand side of the page, or choose from a wide range of camping cookware here >>>Camping Cookware

Camp Cookware

Camping Stoves

Stansport Heavy Duty Camp Grill 24" x 16"Stansport Heavy Duty Camp Grill 24" x 16"
Heavy Duty Camp Cookware Stansport Heavy Duty Camp Grill 24" x 16" Model Number: 614-333 Size:...
Gasone Butane Fuel Canister (4pack)Gasone Butane Fuel Canister (4pack)
Camping Gaz Stoves Gasone Butane Fuel Canister (4pack) camping gaz stoves - click on the image...

14 comments on Coleman Camping Coffee Maker

  1. Jorge M. Santos says:

    Camping Cookware Review by Jorge M. Santos for Coleman Camping Coffee Maker
    Rating:
    This coffee maker will make you feel you are home. I use it with a two burner propane stove and after finding the spot where the carafe should sit (the handle must align with two dots market in the surface) is like brewing with a regular coffee maker. Furthermore I did buy it on sale 50% off regular price, at $22.00, I couldn’t get a percolator that good. This coffee maker will be perfect for a family camping, not so for backwood camping when you don’t need bulky stuff, and won’t have to worry of breaking the carafe.

  2. KingV911 says:

    Camping Cookware Review by KingV911 for Coleman Camping Coffee Maker
    Rating:
    I recently purchased this coffee maker for car camping/mountain biking trips around Wisconsin. I always wished I could have coffee on the mornings that I woke up at the campsite. Percolators do not work well (in my experience) so I had basically given up until I saw one of these at a sporting goods store. I did some review checking online and all I read was good reviews on this particular model (apparently some of the earlier models had some minor issues). It really does work great! I have been using it on my old 2-burner coleman camp stove (coleman fuel) that my dad gave me (it’s probably 30 years old). Contrary to what some people have said about it taking a long time to brew, some saying as much as 45 minutes, it took me about 10 minutes to brew a pot of coffee with cold water. I just cranked up the flame to high and it only took a couple mintutes for the water to heat up enough to start making it’s way up to the basket and start dripping into the pot. Makes coffee as good as your standard countertop-style coffee maker (slightly larger, maybe, because of the larger base) and practically works the same way. If you want coffee at the campsite I cannot imagine anything better than this.

  3. John Clark says:

    Camping Cookware Review by John Clark for Coleman Camping Coffee Maker
    Rating:
    The first two times I tried to use it the coffee did not drip through the filter into the carafe. I finally realized that its “pause and serve lever” is not well designed. At least with my device, when the filter basket is opened and then closed, the “pause and serve” lever does not always line up with the the trap door under the filter basket. So even when the carafe was in place, the trap door was not opening to let the coffee through. Once I figured that out, it worked quite well.

  4. Linda B says:

    Camping Cookware Review by Linda B for Coleman Camping Coffee Maker
    Rating:
    Greatest invention ever! We were carrying a 5000 watt generator just so I could have coffee. (Am I a coffee addict?) Anyway, I found this gem and it works just like the real thing. It may be a little bit slower but not enough to complain about. It does have a bit of a burning plastic smell at first. I love it! I use it on the stove in the trailer.

  5. A. Odland says:

    Camping Cookware Review by A. Odland for Coleman Camping Coffee Maker
    Rating:
    This is a great coffee pot. I used it on the Coleman Liquid gas two burner stove. I have tried several times to make Cowboy Coffee on the fire and on a stove and never had much for success. The first time using the Coleman Coffeemaker and the coffee turned out great. Very pleased camper in South Dakota!!!

  6. a_super_tech says:

    Yes.

    Description
    Enjoy a hot cup o’ joe anywhere you have a 12-volt outlet.

    Compact coffee maker plugs into any 12-volt outlet in your RV, truck, van, auto or SUV. Use the see-through water gauge to brew up to 5 cups. Hot plate keeps coffee warm in the thermo-glass carafe with stay-cool handle. Reusable basket-type filter, 5 1/2′ power cord with built-in 20-amp fuse.

  7. momoftwo says:

    Ive never seen or heard of any… but if they exist, Id like to know about it…lol

  8. john p says:

    the best way to make coffe while camping is to use a French Press. They make light weight presses made out of the same plastic as nalgenes. Simply drop grounds and boiling water into the French press, press down the grounds and you have a cup of coffee. Toss a few creamers in your pack, and you’re good to go. I never go camping w/o my press these days. When i consider enjoyment vs. money spent, my french press is one of my best camping buys ever, and i camp a lot!

  9. campaholicone2000 says:

    Haven’t seen them, and batteries can be pretty pricey after a while. The only things I’ve seen are the 12VDC pots taht plug into the cigarette lighter in your car. That’s no fun, and drains the car battery.

    However, there are lots of great ways to make coffee at camp.

    GSI Outdoors has some great options: http://www.gsioutdoors.com/list.aspx?c=5

    A small campstove is usually all that’s required, and you’ll have cofffee just as fast as you would (maybe faster) than you do at home. I use the GSI Lexan Java Press – it makes really good coffee. Pressed coffee is my all time favorite.

    If you like the idea of an at home coffee maker – you should get one of these: http://www.coleman.com/coleman/colemancom/detail.asp?product_id=5008C700&categoryid=2210
    You put this right over a burner on a 2 burner camp stove, and it works just like an automatic drip coffee maker you probably have on your kitchen counter top. Makes great java.

  10. Wayne B says:

    1. Coffee pots (percolating kind) that you can heat over a stove.
    2. Small espresso makers that involve heating over a stove.
    3. Coffee press (just add water).
    4. Boil a pot of water and add the coffee (cowboy coffee).

  11. snow says:

    pick up the french press for the Jet Boil camp stove makes a great little coffee maker.

  12. Dave M says:

    That’s all I would need in the way of heating something while camping, since I hate to cook while camping. But I have to have my coffee in the morning. It’s actually very easy though to just heat water and put in those fairly new coffee packets that work just like tea packets. And the coffee doesn’t taste like instant either. It actually tastes very good.

    Best thing to do is to just bum coffee off of other people, since everyone else seems to like to make it besides me. I never have gone camping where at least one person didn’t offer me coffee.

    But then you might be camping alone, or don’t want to be a bum.

  13. Da Fish Killa says:

    Check out the Coleman Camping Coffee Maker from REI. You just set it on top of your camping stove.

  14. NJGuy says:

    No, but there are portable stoves, sinks, bathtubs and bedrooms you can get to take with you!
    Use a coffee pot to make coffee on a portable stove.

Comments are closed.