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What I've been doing for last two years, is to just put. Couple of teaspoons of the Turkish in to my cup, pour just boiled water from kettle & stir. It works, but I don't get any fancy froth. What are those coloured cubes you had at the end made of? If some form is sugar, I'm trying to cut down or out of diet. So what else would you recommend?
Hi motog4-75. The "cubes" are called Turkish delight and very sugary. The coffee is quite strong indeed and the Turkish delight helps to sweeten the coffee. I have seen videos where small pieces of chocolate are served with the coffee. There are several brands of sugar free candy to try instead of the Turkish delight. You could also add an artificial sweetener instead of sugar with the coffee at the beginning of the process. I hope this helps! ☕🤗
I'm from the Balkan area an have been drinking and making turkish coffee my whole life. But bare in mind that it's a variation on the original in my area. So the way we do it is we put the water in first and bring it to boil then we put džezva to the side and take one cup of water out of it. Then we put the coffee in the džezva and stir a bit- just to not have clumps of dry coffee when it's done so don't over do it. then we put the džezva back on the stove and let the coffee bubble and rise to the rim, when it does we turn off the gas and put the cup of boiled water back in and let the coffee settle a bit (2-3 min) then pour it in the cups. That's it. Many people let it rise 3 times but i think it is to much. try it and see. If you drink it with sugar then you add sugar at the same time you add the coffee. The "official" recipe is that you put one tea spoon of coffee for every cup of coffee you are making (there are many sizes of džezva ond many sizes of cups so that is not that helpful :) ), but in the real world everyone does it to taste- some make super strong coffee and some super light depending on the amount of coffee they put in. I would say than 50% of people put milk in when the coffee is in the cup so they make the coffee stronger. Important to know- you don't need džezva to do turkish coffee. when we have a big group of people over we just do it in a pot that we eye-ball would be a good size - I'm saying this just so you know you don't need to buy any kit to try it. And one more thing you can use espresso ground coffee - it will be fine.
Thanks for this information! The only time I had it was from a Macedonian family, so I imagine that it was done like you described. I am definitely going to try it this way to see the difference. I have been doing it with the 3 boils, and while it is good, it is still not exactly what I remember. This may be the solution!
Im a little bit confuse So first, is I need to boil the cup of water in Džezva then set it aside put it in a cup. 2. put coffee ground on Džezva and stir (to dissolve the clumps) while heating. And then add water and bring to boil (coffee bubble will come out and rise and wait to rise to the rim) then pour it in a cup slowly. 3. And then add the boiled water in the coffee? I dont get it why we need the boild water? What is that for? The step 2 is pretty much all thats need right?
@@dresign8148 i wrote it confusing. Moste people make the maximimum about of coffee, so if you have room in your džezva for coffee to rise, by all means skip thoes steps and jost boil water and put in coffe But if your water is close to the rim then : 1. Put the water in džezva (to the rim)-boil 2. Poure out a cup of water so you have space for coffe (so it won't overflow and make a mess) 3. Let it rize 4. Pore the water back in and let it settle a few minutes 5. Enjoy
This is an excellent video and I've got more success from this than anything else online. I had a fantastic foam forming, and then when I did the twist and tap method to dissolve grinds I lost the foam and couldn't get it back again.
The grounds do not dissolve. They coagulate and create a puck at the bottom of the cup. You drink, until nothing is left but the grounds. Now it’s time to predict the future with the leftovers.
woah, thank u a lot!! i’ve been searching for any video which clearly explains how to make coffee in cezve at home and only had found lotta videos with professional equipment but not with explanation of making the drink on the kitchen stove. you did it clearly and easy for me, that’s great! p.s. your kitchen and utensils are absolutely gorgeous and looking such cozy that i can’t get rid of the warmy homey impression !!
You use a wooded implement to stir it so you don't scrape the tin plating off of the inside of a Copper Crezve... If you use a Stainless Steel pot or a bare Brass pot, then it doesn't matter..use a jack hammer if you like.
Have you put enough coffee grounds? You need about 7grams, from memory, or a really heaped teaspoon per cup! Also, have you put the heat a lot lower than you think it should be?
Good work. Will try out the warming the coffee in the pot first, and also the tapping. From what I understand, you're supposed to use a wooden utensil when you use a copper cezve, because it has a delicate tin coating inside that gets easily scratched by metal utensils. I have a stainless steel cezve, so not so much of a problem. I started off with Mehmet Efendi - I still come back to it every so often. But I also like some of the Arab and Greek brands - Najjar (especially with cardamom), and G. Charalambous are good. A friend recently gave me a box of imported Egyptian coffee, a brand called Al-Yemeni, which I'm looking forward to trying.
Personally, I find Charalambous very metallic-tasting, but that could just be me! I'd guess that Al-Yemeni coffee is from Yemen, which may make quite authentic Turkish coffee, considering that Yemen was once under Ottoman control - and thus I assume a likely source for coffee beans !
It's not easy. Two key things that may help: 1) Use more coffee grounds. 2) Use less heat. Lower and slower is your friend. And take it off the heat sooner that you think you should. Try these two things and let me know how you get on!
@@paulcrompton2953 thanks for the encouragement. I'm going to try the Mehmet Effendi Cafe as well and a bigger pot for larger servings. It is an adventure to learn as well. I had 2cups this morning and it's a luxury to be able to have it in the comfort of my home. I do get foam just not the huge layer.. either way the perfectionist in me keeps going 😂 great video btw
@@ShinySilverBunny Thanks! Yes, give Mehmet Effendi a try. It can be worth keeping on buying the small 100gram refill sachets of Mehmet - as you always want the freshest coffee. If your coffee is stale, it means the oils will have dried up - meaning you get less froth.
I once bought them online, and was never able to find them again for a reasonable price! They're definitely from Turkey though. Sorry for not being more help!
They do drink this with no filter. Thats why they do the tapping technique to atleast to dissolve the majority of coffee powder. But expected to have this as sandy but flavorful this is their traditional way. If youre a purist do it their way. Adapt and enjoy.
What’s a good brand of coffee. I had Turkish coffee for the first time yesterday and I need to know how to make this at home thank you for sharing your video any other helpful hints would be great
Hello Jennifer, we use Kuru Kahveci Mehmet Efendi brand as instant ground coffee in Turkey.If you can't find it, you can grind it to the finest powder consistency from medium or lightly roasted coffee beans.
@@gocausta Correct - Mehmet Efendi is what I use in the video. You can also grind your own, but only if you have a very fine grinder (if hand-operated, they are often brass).
Better Turkish coffee would be grinding the beans fresh yourself. Must have an espresso grinder that grinds Turkish as well. Lots of good videos on what type of beans to use, but regardless grinding fresh will always be far superior to buying pre ground.
You're not wrong - but if you're just starting out and don't have much equipment, pre-ground Turkish coffee is probably going to give you better results. It's a trade-off!
Cardamom is optional. You can add a little by gently crushing green cardamom pods (around 3-6 pods would do) and putting the little black seeds (of whatever's inside the pod) in to cook with your coffee, at the beginning.
@@cromptonenator i don't know if it's just an acquired taste taste or if they overdid it in the making, but I couldn't finish my cardamon turkish coffee when i was served one at a cafe. Tasted like someone had upended a whole bottle of super bitter perfume in there.
@@cromptonenator Idk i like it strong too, no sugars. It's the first time i've had it with Cardamon but I'm a bit suspicious they out put too much in 🤷♂️
For the granules to be dissolved. it tends have small clumps of dry coffee. A little vibration breaks the small clumps plus assisted by the heat. Im also a beginner into Turkish coffee doing a ton of research hahah
I own a cafe where we have a pretty serious coffee operation, but that’s not how i drink coffee at home. I drink turkish coffee because i like to make coffee in the laziest and most savage way possible. I don’t add sugar and i like it strong as hell
It’s easy yet tastes delicious when done right. If I knew making good, strong coffee was this simple then I wouldn’t have spent so much money on other coffee equipment lol
You CAN get Turkish coffee making machines for cafes, though - my local area has lots of Turkish and Turkish Cypriot cafes, and some of them use the Arcelik coffee machine.
@@cromptonenator no matter what i do my coffee taste like bitterground so i ended up throwing my coffee in a cupboard, now i will use that for my hairs maybe🤣
@@sidrasabir684 Try cooking on a low heat, add water right away (so skip the step of 'cooking' the dry coffee), add sugar, or a pinch of salt. Also, try bottled water.
You can do this, but that's more common if you have a big pot and are making coffee for many people. If you're only making coffee for two, you'll probably have enough foam!
Ah! See every other tutorial online tells you have to scoop the crema out, even when making one single Cup. I have to say the other instructions out there in the world are terrible but these are the best I've seen. Number one lesson I've learnt? Bear in mind that it can take almost 10 minutes, it's worth pointing out.
My great great great grandmother from Turkghanbia actually decapitated her own daughter for stirring the coffee, scrapping the cezbriki, letting the kofe boil and ruining the crema. This video is saving lives! Thank God for white people, explaining stuff!
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Hope you guys really enjoy watching! ☕ If you got value out of this video, please subscribe ↗🔔 , smash the like button, ↖👍,comment for any tips or questions you might have for me! ⬇✍
What I've been doing for last two years, is to just put. Couple of teaspoons of the Turkish in to my cup, pour just boiled water from kettle & stir. It works, but I don't get any fancy froth.
What are those coloured cubes you had at the end made of?
If some form is sugar, I'm trying to cut down or out of diet. So what else would you recommend?
Hi motog4-75. The "cubes" are called Turkish delight and very sugary. The coffee is quite strong indeed and the Turkish delight helps to sweeten the coffee. I have seen videos where small pieces of chocolate are served with the coffee. There are several brands of sugar free candy to try instead of the Turkish delight. You could also add an artificial sweetener instead of sugar with the coffee at the beginning of the process.
I hope this helps! ☕🤗
Did you try HASeeB? My favourite is super extra cardamon.
I'm from the Balkan area an have been drinking and making turkish coffee my whole life. But bare in mind that it's a variation on the original in my area. So the way we do it is we put the water in first and bring it to boil then we put džezva to the side and take one cup of water out of it. Then we put the coffee in the džezva and stir a bit- just to not have clumps of dry coffee when it's done so don't over do it. then we put the džezva back on the stove and let the coffee bubble and rise to the rim, when it does we turn off the gas and put the cup of boiled water back in and let the coffee settle a bit (2-3 min) then pour it in the cups. That's it. Many people let it rise 3 times but i think it is to much. try it and see. If you drink it with sugar then you add sugar at the same time you add the coffee. The "official" recipe is that you put one tea spoon of coffee for every cup of coffee you are making (there are many sizes of džezva ond many sizes of cups so that is not that helpful :) ), but in the real world everyone does it to taste- some make super strong coffee and some super light depending on the amount of coffee they put in. I would say than 50% of people put milk in when the coffee is in the cup so they make the coffee stronger. Important to know- you don't need džezva to do turkish coffee. when we have a big group of people over we just do it in a pot that we eye-ball would be a good size - I'm saying this just so you know you don't need to buy any kit to try it. And one more thing you can use espresso ground coffee - it will be fine.
Thanks for this information! The only time I had it was from a Macedonian family, so I imagine that it was done like you described. I am definitely going to try it this way to see the difference. I have been doing it with the 3 boils, and while it is good, it is still not exactly what I remember. This may be the solution!
Will definitely try this and I will have some feed back. Thank you for sharing!
Im a little bit confuse
So first, is I need to boil the cup of water in Džezva then set it aside put it in a cup.
2. put coffee ground on Džezva and stir (to dissolve the clumps) while heating. And then add water and bring to boil (coffee bubble will come out and rise and wait to rise to the rim) then pour it in a cup slowly.
3. And then add the boiled water in the coffee?
I dont get it why we need the boild water? What is that for? The step 2 is pretty much all thats need right?
@@dresign8148 i wrote it confusing. Moste people make the maximimum about of coffee, so if you have room in your džezva for coffee to rise, by all means skip thoes steps and jost boil water and put in coffe
But if your water is close to the rim then :
1. Put the water in džezva (to the rim)-boil
2. Poure out a cup of water so you have space for coffe (so it won't overflow and make a mess)
3. Let it rize
4. Pore the water back in and let it settle a few minutes
5. Enjoy
@@marinathegirl28 now I understand! Thank you!
This is an excellent video and I've got more success from this than anything else online.
I had a fantastic foam forming, and then when I did the twist and tap method to dissolve grinds I lost the foam and couldn't get it back again.
The wooden stick is good because it won't damage the tin coating on the inside of the cezve
The grounds do not dissolve. They coagulate and create a puck at the bottom of the cup. You drink, until nothing is left but the grounds. Now it’s time to predict the future with the leftovers.
Oh I forgot the most important message. Thank you for an formative video.
Not good to the last drop. (That's why Folgers was created) But the drops before the last are way better than Folgers!
@@lynnmccoysloan7705 😀
Thanks. You're very amiable and fun to listen to! will try your tips soon.
That’s the VERY BEST coffee. I’ve also tried others and this is it!! I won’t have any other.
Thank you! I am a novice and FINALLY made my first cup of Turkish coffee with beautiful froth after watching your video!☕❤️
Great video. Thank you. Unlike dozens of other videos I watched, this one nailed it for me.
Thanks - that's why I made this video. TH-cam's not short of Turkish coffee videos, but I couldn't find one that really gave me tips.
I get my Turkish coffee from Egypt, and I always make sure to bring some back to the US with me 😊
Hi and thank you! That is actually is the only useful video on the topic I've encountered so far! You tips do help!
Thank you for this! :) This was really helpful!
my favourite is KAFFEE NAJJAR. It is very dark. You can get it with or without cardamom.
Simple and rich in information, good job my friend
Thanks Paul. Best vid out there.
Thanks just after drinking a huge mess, will definitely try this 👍
Thank you very much mate, yes those are BIG TIPS !
Great tips. Many thanks
woah, thank u a lot!!
i’ve been searching for any video which clearly explains how to make coffee in cezve at home and only had found lotta videos with professional equipment but not with explanation of making the drink on the kitchen stove.
you did it clearly and easy for me, that’s great!
p.s. your kitchen and utensils are absolutely gorgeous and looking such cozy that i can’t get rid of the warmy homey impression !!
My pleasure! And thank you for the kitchen compliment - I of course dressed up the kitchen a little before filming :)
thanks mate, i'll give it a go tomorrow morning and let you know...
You use a wooded implement to stir it so you don't scrape the tin plating off of the inside of a Copper Crezve... If you use a Stainless Steel pot or a bare Brass pot, then it doesn't matter..use a jack hammer if you like.
That sounds right - thanks for the comment!
i caution the roasting of the coffee powder: this can hasten over-extraction and result in a bitter cup.
great tips, thank you!
Well made. Love the froth. Gotta grt a good djezva.
Nice tip, 🙂, thanks.
I still dont get it. I follow all the steps. How do i get the crema? It NEVER works.
Have you put enough coffee grounds? You need about 7grams, from memory, or a really heaped teaspoon per cup! Also, have you put the heat a lot lower than you think it should be?
Güzel
we really like Greek style. how is turkish different, or the same? would we like this better?
Fazıl bey’in kahvesi is really good
Beautiful.
Thanks man you really helped me💐💐,
My pleasure! I wish I had been able to show the coffee cooking - I just didn't have the camera equipment at the time!
So u dont scratch the plating or effect the temperature.
Good work. Will try out the warming the coffee in the pot first, and also the tapping.
From what I understand, you're supposed to use a wooden utensil when you use a copper cezve, because it has a delicate tin coating inside that gets easily scratched by metal utensils. I have a stainless steel cezve, so not so much of a problem.
I started off with Mehmet Efendi - I still come back to it every so often. But I also like some of the Arab and Greek brands - Najjar (especially with cardamom), and G. Charalambous are good. A friend recently gave me a box of imported Egyptian coffee, a brand called Al-Yemeni, which I'm looking forward to trying.
Personally, I find Charalambous very metallic-tasting, but that could just be me! I'd guess that Al-Yemeni coffee is from Yemen, which may make quite authentic Turkish coffee, considering that Yemen was once under Ottoman control - and thus I assume a likely source for coffee beans !
Thank you
The best Turkish coffee for me is Abu Auf brand
Medium roast one + cardamon
U will love it and get addicted to it
thank you!
I have an electric stove , and am making it for the first time and I have no clue which heat setting to use
Try low heat- if it takes longer, that's no bad thing! It's generally very, very easy to burn your coffee. It's not as common to undercook it!
You have my same cups(identical) coffee brand and even cezve lol
Cheers!
Why are you heating (and maybe roasting) the coffee powder???
To release the oils, he said
I'm new to Turkish coffee and did get some foam but really not alot like you did here so it is frustrating for me still.. I will keep trying!!!
It's not easy. Two key things that may help: 1) Use more coffee grounds. 2) Use less heat. Lower and slower is your friend. And take it off the heat sooner that you think you should. Try these two things and let me know how you get on!
@@paulcrompton2953 thanks for the encouragement. I'm going to try the Mehmet Effendi Cafe as well and a bigger pot for larger servings. It is an adventure to learn as well. I had 2cups this morning and it's a luxury to be able to have it in the comfort of my home. I do get foam just not the huge layer.. either way the perfectionist in me keeps going 😂 great video btw
@@ShinySilverBunny Thanks! Yes, give Mehmet Effendi a try. It can be worth keeping on buying the small 100gram refill sachets of Mehmet - as you always want the freshest coffee. If your coffee is stale, it means the oils will have dried up - meaning you get less froth.
@@paulcrompton2953 hey sir, the standard turkish coffee is 60ml right? Just like the espresso. I can see that you are using 90mL cup? Am i right?
@@dresign8148 my cups are around 60ml. Standard size would be 60-75ml (although some of that will be coffee. Hope that helps!
You mentioned "1 really big heaped teaspoon" of coffee, but you added 2 of them?
Where did you buy those Turkish cups from? They look cool.
I once bought them online, and was never able to find them again for a reasonable price! They're definitely from Turkey though. Sorry for not being more help!
You will have good foam if you will grind beans right before brewing...
How do the granules "melt"? I see there is no straining of the granules and fo not understand this.
They do drink this with no filter. Thats why they do the tapping technique to atleast to dissolve the majority of coffee powder. But expected to have this as sandy but flavorful this is their traditional way. If youre a purist do it their way. Adapt and enjoy.
it worked!
What’s a good brand of coffee. I had Turkish coffee for the first time yesterday and I need to know how to make this at home thank you for sharing your video any other helpful hints would be great
Hello Jennifer, we use Kuru Kahveci Mehmet Efendi brand as instant ground coffee in Turkey.If you can't find it, you can grind it to the finest powder consistency from medium or lightly roasted coffee beans.
@@gocausta Correct - Mehmet Efendi is what I use in the video. You can also grind your own, but only if you have a very fine grinder (if hand-operated, they are often brass).
Mehmet Efendi brand :) That's what I use in the video.
Better Turkish coffee would be grinding the beans fresh yourself. Must have an espresso grinder that grinds Turkish as well.
Lots of good videos on what type of beans to use, but regardless grinding fresh will always be far superior to buying pre ground.
You're not wrong - but if you're just starting out and don't have much equipment, pre-ground Turkish coffee is probably going to give you better results. It's a trade-off!
I prefer Cafe Najjar over Mehmet Efendi, but it’s still good.
does it come with cardamon?
Cardamom is optional. You can add a little by gently crushing green cardamom pods (around 3-6 pods would do) and putting the little black seeds (of whatever's inside the pod) in to cook with your coffee, at the beginning.
@@cromptonenator i don't know if it's just an acquired taste taste or if they overdid it in the making, but I couldn't finish my cardamon turkish coffee when i was served one at a cafe. Tasted like someone had upended a whole bottle of super bitter perfume in there.
@@luker.6555 Turkish people can like their coffee quite strong tasting. Eating a piece of Turkish delight softens the flavour a little.
@@cromptonenator Idk i like it strong too, no sugars. It's the first time i've had it with Cardamon but I'm a bit suspicious they out put too much in 🤷♂️
@@luker.6555You might be right. The cardamom should compliment the coffee flavor and not hide it.
What exactly does the tapping do? I didn't quite get your explanation.
For the granules to be dissolved. it tends have small clumps of dry coffee. A little vibration breaks the small clumps plus assisted by the heat.
Im also a beginner into Turkish coffee doing a ton of research hahah
@@dresign8148 enjoy your coffee ☕
Brooooo I did it in ur way and I get no foam whatsoever whatttt did I did wronggggg😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
Soo many variables! What do you think went wrong? For example, did you cook it until it boiled? Did you put enough coffee grounds?
Freshness of water has nothing to do with air or bubbles or whatnot. It's about its ph level, which changes over time as the water sits out there
I own a cafe where we have a pretty serious coffee operation, but that’s not how i drink coffee at home. I drink turkish coffee because i like to make coffee in the laziest and most savage way possible. I don’t add sugar and i like it strong as hell
Yeah - all about keeping it easy!
It’s easy yet tastes delicious when done right. If I knew making good, strong coffee was this simple then I wouldn’t have spent so much money on other coffee equipment lol
You CAN get Turkish coffee making machines for cafes, though - my local area has lots of Turkish and Turkish Cypriot cafes, and some of them use the Arcelik coffee machine.
But i heard that if u stir coffee while its on heat it will destroy the taste
Not if you just do it at the beginning gently for a few times, while the coffee is still cool!
@@cromptonenator no matter what i do my coffee taste like bitterground so i ended up throwing my coffee in a cupboard, now i will use that for my hairs maybe🤣
@@sidrasabir684 Turkish coffee is quite bitter. I am guessing that you may be using a bitter type of coffee. What brand of coffee are you using?
@@cromptonenator mehmet efendi
@@sidrasabir684 Try cooking on a low heat, add water right away (so skip the step of 'cooking' the dry coffee), add sugar, or a pinch of salt. Also, try bottled water.
You skipped a step there, guy.. you're suppose to scoop some of the foam with a spoon and put it in the cup before you pour it in
You can do this, but that's more common if you have a big pot and are making coffee for many people. If you're only making coffee for two, you'll probably have enough foam!
Ah! See every other tutorial online tells you have to scoop the crema out, even when making one single Cup.
I have to say the other instructions out there in the world are terrible but these are the best I've seen.
Number one lesson I've learnt? Bear in mind that it can take almost 10 minutes, it's worth pointing out.
my mom got this coffee for me and i have no clue what to do with it :D
Give it a try and let me know how you get on!
BRB making coffee, will report back
My great great great grandmother from Turkghanbia actually decapitated her own daughter for stirring the coffee, scrapping the cezbriki, letting the kofe boil and ruining the crema.
This video is saving lives!
Thank God for white people, explaining stuff!
Some Arabs allow the coffee to boil and then they serve it.
You certainly can, but if you do that, you won't have any frothy goodness!
Espresso on steroids
Jesus Christ is the son of God who died and rose three days later and loves all of you. He died for everyone and wants you with Him, to know Him and live for His glory. Come be saved eternally and spend time with Him to know Him. Be saved, free, forgiven, healed, delivered, baptized, whole and let Him show you how He is everything you need.
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We are ambassadors of Christ. We represent God, when we are seen Jesus should be seen, His ways not ours. We should be living for and showing God, living for His glory. We are to be an example of Jesus for the world to see Him and want to know Him and know Him more. 🙏 🔥
2 Chronicles 7:14 says, if My people humble themselves and pray and seek My face and turn from their wicked ways I will hear them from heaven and heal their land. 🙏 💖
People need to turn from their wicked ways, Jesus paid for it. That's God stating it in that verse and there are more verses. People need to repent, to be cleansed by His blood and live Holy because He's Holy and righteous because He's righteous. Our God said to stop sinning in many many scriptures and He paid for everyone to be cleansed of sin (Isaiah 53), and to live how He said. He dwells in the Holy temple (your body) and said not to defile the temple. He said to defile the temple is death. He's always serious about everything He said to do. He's just as serious about what He said not to do. We live in obedience to His law, every word if it! He dwells within us all to be with and lead us in His ways. 💕🙏
Deuteronomy 28 there are blessings for obedience and curses for disobedience. The whole chapter, and verse 46 is one example of generational curses. These go into the following generations, the 3 and 4th. Our children pay the price for our sin. Stop sinning you are sending consequences to yourself and to your loved ones, children. By God's law you are. If you don't believe me ask Him, in Jesus name may you see and know the truth in it's fullness.
Love your neighbor as you love yourself.
He's worthy of everything He said and paid for, so I implore you to do as God said.
Jesus said If you love me you will obey my commands. Love Him with all your heart, mind, soul and strength. 💖🔥🕊️🙏
Praise God Hallelujah Jesus🙏💖
In Jesus powerful name🙏🔥🕊️ 💖
Hello 🙏 thank you for this comment 🙏. Have you been baptized in the name of Jesus Christ for the remisión of sins and received the gift of the Holy Ghost if I may ask?
@@maurissa1933 yes, 6 years ago. I got saved and water baptized in a river, I got forgiven and His spirit dwells within me, His Holy temple.
And how did he get good creme on his coffee?
Wrong video blud
Sounds like the narrator is being chased by a wild cougar! 😂
Its Greek coffee. Majority of Turks prefer tea!
Unsafe tutorial: fire hazard with wood directly on stove with flame/flame/heat on, beside wood.
What, u folks scared of a little burnt wood?
That was only for show - in a controlled experiment. I don't advise copying my filming setup!
you forgot the coffe filter lol