About Cyprus
Time for a Coffee

Cypriots drink lots of local coffee. It is made individually in
small, long handled pots, wide at the base and tapering at the top.
These are called mbrikia and come in various sizes. Fresh coffee
beans, usually Brazilian, are finely ground or powdered daily and
one heaped teaspoon is added to each demitasse of cold water. Sugar
goes in too at this stage, before heating the coffee on the stove.
So you need to know whether you order your coffee glykos (sweet)
metrios (medium sweet) or sketos (unsweetened).
The mbrikia are heated on the stove and when sugar has dissolved,
the coffee is allowed to come to the boil, forming a creamy froth
Kaimaki on top.
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As the froth turns in from the sides and the coffee begins to rise
in the pot, it is removed from the heat and a little is poured into
each cup to distribute the froth.
Cyprus coffee is strong and should always be served with a glass
of cold water. It contains no spices, such as the cardamon pod you
might find in a cup of Arabic coffee, but sip with care, for at
the bottom of every cup lurks a little sediment - do not drink it!
So relax, nibble something delicious, perhaps a kalo prama, literally
translated, it means 'good thing', and, like so many flavor of Cyprus,
that's just what it is.

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