Founding Vincent Marotta and
Samuel Glazer founded a company in
Cleveland,
Ohio focused on coffee delivery called North American Systems (NAS) in the early 1970s. At this time, Marotta had an idea to create an automatic
drip coffeemaker. Marotta and Glazer hired two former
Westinghouse engineers,
Edmund Abel and Edwin Schulze, to engineer the idea. In 1972, the Mr. Coffee brand drip coffeemaker was made available for home use. Prior to this machine, coffee was primarily made in a
percolator, which combined the ground coffee and water together throughout the
brewing process. Wide variation in both heat source temperature and how long individual users allowed the percolation cycle to go on often resulted in bitter and burned tasting coffee. The new Mr. Coffee machine placed only the water in a reservoir above the pot, where it was heated by an electrical element and allowed to "
drip" freely through the basket of ground coffee and into a carafe below. This process, which controlled both temperature and duration, produced a much more uniform brewing cycle, resulting in a consistent, fresh flavor. Later units use a
thermosyphon (which employs the same thermodynamic principle that drives
geysers) to raise boiling water from a reservoir aside the pot up a lift tube, then down through the grounds. In either system, only the water is ever in direct contact with the heating element, never brewing or brewed coffee. In 1973, Marotta convinced highly regarded Hall of Fame baseball player
Joe DiMaggio to become an advertising spokesman for the brand. The coffee maker sold more than one million units by April 1974. A succession of products from 1992 to 1995 — the Potato Perfect, the Mr. Coffee Juicer, Food Dehydrator by Mr. Coffee, Bread maker by Mr. Coffee, and Mrs. Tea Hot Tea Maker — contributed about one-third of Mr. Coffee's total annual sales of $174 million by 1995.
Ownership In the 1980s, Mr. Coffee endured a
leveraged buyout and two significant changes in ownership before being acquired by Health O Meter Products, Inc. (eventually known as Signature Brands USA) in 1994. In 1998,
Sunbeam Corporation (eventually known as American Household, Inc.) purchased Signature Brands. In January 2005, Jarden acquired American Household, Inc. In 2015 Jarden was acquired by Newell-Rubbermaid, which changed its name to
Newell Brands, the current owner of the Mr. Coffee brand.
2012 recall In 2012, more than 600,000 Mr. Coffee Single Cup Brewing System models were voluntarily recalled in the United States and Canada. A malfunction caused the machines to build up steam and potentially spew water and grounds out of the brewing chamber. There were 164 reports of the malfunction made, among which there were 61 injuries including facial and hand burns. ==Popular culture==