Campfire coffee
Perhaps one of the most abused item around a campfire is coffee, Some of it that has been offered to me is really bad. Good coffee is not that hard, although in this era where almost everyone uses a drip machine at home, it takes some learning. For campfire use, one sees both the percolator pot and the ones most commonly called a boiler.
Now some do like perked coffee, if you dont thats fine, but most like drip coffee better and it is not hard to make coffee as good as a drip machine in a so called boiler, I do it all the time and I get a lot of praise for my coffee.
The first item to making good coffee is to start with good ground coffee. Ill do a topic in the future on coffee and its beans with the common types in The Old West, but for now well just assume you have a favorite bean and know where to get it.
This coffee needs to be ground fairly coarse, if you dont have an old type hand cranked grinder, just grind it where you buy it using their grinder set coarse.
I have a cast iron one and here is my helper Rick grinding coffee, this was in the morning before the tourists showed up, so pardon the bag, although it was common to buy it bulk in a plain paper bag.

One can also grind it in a cloth using the back of an axe, hammer or other such thing, lots was done with a gun butt.
When you are ready, fill the pot with clean water, put it on the fire and boil the water,

Often I use a trivet and a dutch oven thats already going for this:


When the water has boiled, remove it from the fire, let the water cool slightly below boiling and add the coffee. By not letting the coffee boil, less tannic acid is released to make the coffee bitter. That is the secret to drip machines and taste, the water is slightly below boiling.
After the coffee has steeped for about 10 minutes, tap the side of the pot to settle the grounds and pour; youll get very few grounds in the pot.
To keep the coffee warm, keep it near the fire, but do not let it get hot enough to boil.

If one wants, buy some cheap un-bleached muslin, wash it, cut it into squares and tie your coffee up in that with cotton string and use as a tea bag. One must leave room of course for the coffee to expand. This method is often seen in cookbooks from the period.
Either method will keep you from having to toss in salt, fish skins, eggs or any of the many strange methods Ive heard of to settle the grounds, none which would improve the taste of the coffee.