What would the Ascot pattern Oneida footed tray complete coffee tea service set be forth ? purchased in late 1959 have original box
81.25 gallons....serving each person 8 oz of coffee.
Keurig is the pioneer when it comes to single serving coffee makers. Cuisinart has also recently come out with some very comparable single serving coffee makers.
Personally, I don't feel ANY instant coffee compares with fresh brewed coffee. It's like instant mac and cheese or homemade. Coffee is meant to be brewed. When you make instant coffee, it doesn't have the same effect as the brewing process does. If your problem is time, I would recommend those single serving coffee makers you can preset and the coffee comes in single serving containers. All you do is peel the top off, pop it in the coffee slot and preset it to be ready when you wake up.
If you are ever going to make more than one cup of coffee which most of the time you do even for yourself, then I would recommend getting a different one.
assuming that each serving is going to be about 8 ounces I would serve about 600 ounces of coffee (assuming that everyone is going to drink it).
Depends on the size of the serving of coffee. A standard "cup" of coffee uses six ounces (177 ml) of water. The 500 ml answer below would be a REALLY big cup- a half liter.
a hunder dollars
Many department stores carry them. A good place to look would be popular stores such as Target or Walmart for the more inexpensive brands or JC Penney or Sears for higher priced coffee makers.
Some of the most popular single serve coffee makers are the least expensive on/off coffee machines. The more fancy buttons, lights, K-Cups, coffee grinding coffee machines out there tend to have options for all sorts of different shape and sized coffees but a regular on/off switch only coffee cup would be best for any single serving.
You would evaporate the water and there would be dried up coffee powder
The Oneida is a company that creates Silver Holloware & Flatware. I actually have a fork from the onedia community, so I know they specialize in Silver Plates Flatware and Holloware. So I would think par plate would mean Silver Plate.
I would say so, but how much depends on many things, like age, and quality.