It’s no secret that I am a coffee lover. Some might consider
it more of an addiction than a love affair. In any event, over the years I've gone through a progression of coffee grinders and coffee machines. More
recently I’d relegated those machines to storage opting instead for a daily
visit to a coffee shop or two. The reason for this shift was that I seldom
finished a whole pot of coffee at home. Mama Wordbones does not enjoy caffeine
so she would never share the pot I brewed which resulted in half the pot going
down the drain.
The only problem with the coffee shop strategy was that I couldn't get my java jolt before leaving the house. On days with inclement
weather it was particularly troublesome.
No longer. For Christmas Mama Wordbones gave me a K-cup coffee
maker. According to this report by Rhoda Miel in Plastics News, as of last
April single cup coffee makers “have gone from 4 percent of the U.S. market in
2010 to 12 percent.”
“While automatic-drip coffee makers like those sold under
the Mr. Coffee brand name are still the most popular in the U.S., holding 39
percent of the market today, their share is slowly shrinking, while the one-cup
format is on the way up.
“It’s just growing,” said Robert Vu, a Houston-based creator
of Solofill LLC. “Everybody has to have a one-cup [system] these days,” he said.”