Call us 

Coffee Tycoon’s Ashes Interred In The Iconic Pot He Made Famous

In life as in death, it was all about the coffee for Renato Bialetti.

When the 93 -year-old Italian entrepreneur who delivered the stove-top Moka coffee maker to the masses succumbed on Feb. 11, their own families decided there was only one way for him to be embed. They placed his ashes inside one of his iconic, octagonal aluminum pots.

Bialetti’s persists were anointed by a clergyman in his hometown of Casale Corte Cerro, 60 miles northwest of Milan, on Tuesday before being interred in their own families tomb in nearby Omega.

  • Digg
  • Gmail
  • Myspace
ASSOCIATED PRESS Father Pietro Segato, parish clergyman of Casale Corte Cerro, stands behinda Moka pot containing the ashes of Renato Bialetti.

Bialetti’s father Alfonso acquired the patent for the coffee maker in 1933. According to The Local, Alfonso struggled to sell the contraption and made merely 70,000 units before his son Renato took over the company in 1947.

The younger Bialetti launched an ambitious marketing campaign, imprinting a parody of himself on the side of the flowerpot, and went on to sell more than 330 million units worldwide. They range from single-cup manufacturers to pots that they are able drink up to 24 servings.

The Bialetti family sold the businessto another Italian company in 1986, and the percolators are now produced in Romania, reports The Telegraph.

The interment method may seem unusual, but it’s not the most bizarre way someone’s ashes have been buried.

Here’s what other people have done with their loved ones’ ashes 😛 TAGEND

Fireworks

  • Digg
  • Gmail
  • Myspace

Blend Images – Granger Wootz via Getty Images

Be like gonzo writer Hunter S. Thompson, and go out with a slam — like he did in 2005.

Vinyl Record

  • Digg
  • Gmail
  • Myspace

filonmar via Getty Images

Have your loved one’s ashes pressed into a vinyl register, politenes of AndVinyly.com.

Diamonds

  • Digg
  • Gmail
  • Myspace

Mina De La O via Getty Images

Bling up the ashes by converting them into a diamond. LifeGem offers the services offered, starting from $2,999.

Shotgun Blast

  • Digg
  • Gmail
  • Myspace

DreamPictures via Getty Images

Pack the ashes into shotgun cartridges, and blast them out in homage.

Tattoo

  • Digg
  • Gmail
  • Myspace

Charles O. Slavens via Getty Images

Etch the ashes into your own skin, by having them mixed in the ink and tattooed.