I have a dotty old uncle who lives alone and drinks his
coffee right out of the coffee pot. He doesn't bother to pour his coffee into
a cup...maybe washing a coffee cup just makes more work...who knows?
Most people, however, prefer to drink their coffee out
of a coffee cup or a coffee mug. It is the civilized thing to do.
When people buy place settings of fine china of just
a set of everyday dishes, the thing that determines their choice is the shape
and size of the cup. After all, plates, bread plates, soup or cereal bowls,
saucers, and other pieces in a place setting or set of dishes are all pretty
much the same. They may come in varying sizes and the patterns are different,
but still they are all basically the same design. Only the cups are different.
The size and shape of the cup and the handles on the cups is most often the
determining factor is the selection of dinner ware.
There are different coffee cups for serving different
coffees, as well. Most "regular" coffee cups hold between 6 and 8 ounces of
coffee. But there are demitasse cups that only hold between 2 and 4 ounces and
big coffee mugs that hold up to 20 ounces. Latte coffee cups must be large
enough to hold the frothy milk.
Coffee cups can be purchased separately, or as part
of a set of dishes or a piece in a place setting of china. Coffee cups don't
all have handles either. There are double-walled cups without handles that are
used to serve espresso or cappuccino.
The thickness of the wall of the coffee cup is the
determining factor of how long coffee will stay hot in a coffee cup. Remember
those old thick-walled white cups of roadside coffee house fame? Coffee would
stay hot in those things all the way through the eating of a meal and beyond.
On the other hand, coffee in a delicate fine china cup will only stay hot a
very few minutes.