12x 3oz Espresso HuskeeCup and Saucer Set of 2
SKU: 76070595181

12x 3oz Espresso HuskeeCup and Saucer Set of 2

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Description

12x 3oz Espresso HuskeeCup and Saucer Set of 2Introducing the 12 pack of HuskeeCup espresso cup and saucer sets HuskeeCups make sustainability stylish. For coffee lovers everywhere, a HuskeeCup keeps your coffee hot and protects your hands no need for cardboard or rubber sleeves. Dishwasher safe and stackable, they are the perfect cup for your caf, roastery, office, or coffee shop. This pack contains two espresso cups and two saucers a convenient and cost effect way to purchase for your caf or

Introducing the 12 pack of HuskeeCup espresso cup and saucer sets

HuskeeCups make sustainability stylish. For coffee lovers everywhere, a HuskeeCup keeps your coffee hot and protects your hands - no need for cardboard or rubber sleeves. Dishwasher safe and stackable, they are the perfect cup for your café, roastery, office, or coffee shop. This pack contains two espresso cups and two saucers - a convenient and cost effect way to purchase for your café or restaurant.

Did you know, in the UK alone we use 7 million disposable coffee cups every day? The reusable HuskeeCups not only battle the waste produced by disposable coffee cups, they also take on waste within the coffee production process. Every cup is made using coffee husk, an organic waste material that's typically discarded at the milling stage of coffee production.

Whether you're a coffee shop, roastery, retailer, office, or any other type of business looking to make a positive change towards becoming more sustainable, get in touch now to enquire about using and/or stocking HuskeeCups.

What is a HuskeeCup made from?

A HuskeeCup is made from a unique eco-composite polymer featuring coffee husk at it's core. What is coffee husk? Coffee husk is the discarded outer layer of a coffee bean, a waste product at the milling stage of coffee production. By using HuskeeCup, you are helping to recycle hundrds of tonnes of waste material from the production of coffee.

Café ready cups

A focus of the HuskeeCup design is how it performs in a working coffee shop environment. Are they durable? Yes. Are they stackable? Yes. Are they easy to clean and dishwasher safe? Of course! Fully equipped to take a daily beating in busy restaurant or cafe, this attention to long life and usability makes a HuskeeCup very suitable for the home or office environment as well.

Staying in with your coffee?

The espresso saucer is the perfect size for the Huskee 3oz espresso cup and is a great way to experience coffee in your cafe, office, or home.

How to clean your Huskee Cup

Huskee cups are easy to look after, as long as you follow a few simple rules. AVOID abrasive cleaners such as scourers or Brillo pads. DO use a microfibre cloth for tough stains and if your cups undergo constant use, DO soak once a month in espresso cleaner.

The most efficient way to clean your HuskeeCups is to simply put them in the dishwasher. It's as easy as that!

HuskeeLoop creates a sustainable future

HuskeeCups should last for several years, but when they do eventually reach the end of their long life, please return them to us! We'll then make sure they get returned to the manufacturers to get recycled into new Huskee products. This is HuskeeLoop - the ultimate closed-loop ecosystem ensuring zero waste.

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SKU: 76070595181

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John Riley
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 5
Profoundly Deep and Spiritual Homilies
Format: Hardcover
Cardinal Cantalamessa's homilies are interesting and deep. I can't possibly read them except slowly and meditatively.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on January 17, 2026
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Verified Purchase
James Secora
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 5
A readable set of reflections on Faith, Hope, and Charity
Format: Hardcover
Cardinal Raniero Cantalamessa offers a series of wonderful theological and spiritual insights into the three theological virtues of Faith, Hope, and Charity. Taking presentations on each of the virtues, the Cardinal edited each into smaller units, each three to four pages in length. This makes for easy reading (one could take a selection a day) for "lectio divina". His treatment of "Justification by Faith" puts what has been a "thorn of contention" into easily understood terms that can open itself to ecumenical dialog with other Christian denominations for whom this has been a point of misunderstanding of the Catholic position.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 18, 2024
E
Erik D. Curren
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 5
We can all be wise men bearing gifts to Jesus
Format: Hardcover
Faith, hope, and charity are not just virtues that we can develop to bring ourselves closer to God and our fellow person but they are also gifts that we can bring to God, writes this household preacher to two Popes. Cardinal Cantalamessa writes on serious topics with an accessible and joyful style that welcomes the reader to see him or herself as one of the Magi bringing precious and deeply meaningful gifts to Christ.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 14, 2024
R
Rocco
Waukegan, US
★★★★★ 5
Cardinal Cantalamessa is a Saint!
Format: Hardcover
This book has the wisdom of the fathers infused with the gentle Grace of the Holy Spirit, written for modern day Christian readers.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 20, 2024
J
jpmath
Whiting, US
★★★★★ 4
Beautiful and profound, albeit flawed
Format: Hardcover
What I'd really like to rate this is 4 1/2 stars, because it isn't perfect, but it's better than a 4. I just can't bear to give it a 5, for reasons described below. The book has three main parts, each named for a theological virtue of the title. Altogether there are 40 chapters: 14 dedicated to faith, 10 to hope, and 16 to charity. A couple of "Bonus" chapters called "Excursus" take up some interesting theological questions that are related but don't quite fall under any one topic: did Jesus possess the theological virtues? and From God as Love to the Filioque. The book is deeply learned and cites theologians through the centuries, including a few I'd never heard of despite a lot of formal and informal theological study. Of course you meet the usual suspects such as Origen, pseudo-Dionysius, Augustine, Thomas Aquinas, Catherine of Siena, John of the Cross, Mother Teresa, and others; but: have YOU heard of St. Zeno of Verona before? If not, you're in for a treat! The text has more of an Augustinian flavor than a Scholastic one. (I should qualify that claim by admitting that I am at best an armchair theologian, so don't quote me on that.) But, for example: Chapter 39 discusses Beauty, uses the idea of God's eternal Beauty to explain the Trinity, and concludes with St. Augustine's "recipe" for becoming beautiful. Indeed, an in-depth discussion of the Trinity doesn't appear at all until Part 3 on Charity, rather than in the chapter on Faith! An important distinction that Fr. Cantalamessa draws is between "objective" aspects of a theological virtue and the "subjective" aspects of the same. The "objective" aspects refer to the object of the virtue, such as God Himself; the "subjective" aspects refer to how we experience them. He points out that, historically, the "objective" view tended to predominate in theological discussion, whereas the "subjective" view tends to dominate more recently, almost to the exclusion of the objective. It will probably not surprise the reader that Fr. Cantalamessa, former Preacher to the Papal Hosuehold, comes down squarely in the Catholic approach of "both/and", and he elaborates on this. A very appealing aspect of this book is the occasional use of parable and analogy to explain difficult subjects: a parable on trying to justify ourselves by our works (Ch. 7), analogies for "the hint that God exists" (ch. 5), the analogy of the seed (ch. 14), an analogy that hope needs difficulties and tribulations (ch. 22), the Trinity (ch. 29), God's love for us is erotic (ch. 34), and how we might hope that even Nietzsche can be saved (ch. 37). Many analogies, though not all, are drawn from ordinary family life: a mother's love for a child, a child's temper tantrum before collapsing in tears on a parent. These are powerful and effective. Unfortunately, I can't rate it 5 stars, because the text seems to consider its audience to be the average educated lay Catholic, but there are two serious weaknesses both for the theological newbie and even for the theological adolescent. One is the use of many unfamiliar terms, some of them merely transliterated from Greek, and no definition given anywhere -- often, not even a hint of what the word may mean. In some cases this can make it difficult to follow the discussion. For instance, the text dedicates two entire chapters to the question of justification, which makes sense given that it's an important topic in the realm of faith, and it's important to take it seriously. But the book never once provides a definition, which suggests the reader should be familiar with the term already. I guarantee you most people don't know what the word means. But even if you think that a definition of "justification" will indeed come tripping off the average reader's tongue, I challenge you to make a case for terms like ontological, parousia, and parenesis. I've been reading Catholic theology for 30 years and parenesis is a new one even to me. Sure, the reader might could look them up, and I'm glad to expand my vocabulary, but who's the audience here? If the text is meant only for seminarians, then never mind, but given how Word on Fire is marketing this I really don't think that is the case. The second major weakness is all the more disappointing, as it is so common to contemporary works of theology: when newer developments seem to contradict past dogma or even Scripture itself, pretend the dogma and Scripture doesn't exist. This happens at least twice: 1) Surely Fr. Cantalamessa is not unaware that Scripture both Old and New is replete with references to Christ "ransoming" us from God's wrath. Yet there he is in Chapter 31, not merely acting as if it doesn't exist, but contemptuously dismissive of the notion! Grant the Scholastics this much: at least they took Matthew 20.28, Romans 1.18, Romans 2.5-8, 1 Timothy 2.6, 1 Peter 1.18-19, and Revelation 19.15 seriously enough to wrestle with them. 2) Similarly, the Council of Florence made certain pronouncements on "those existing outside the Catholic Church" and "the souls of those who depart this life in actual mortal sin, or in original sin alone." Chapter 14 acts as if they do not exist. I do not for a moment mean to advocate for the "glass half-empty" interpretation of these pronouncements that predominated theological discourse for centuries, let alone for Feeneyism, but we ignore them at our peril, if only because ignoring them leaves a great big breach in the apologetic wall that will come under assault both from those who do reject the Second Vatican Council and from hostile Protestants more knowledgeable of Catholic theological history than the average Catholic and, one half-wonders, the average Catholic theologian. Those drawbacks, while severe enough in my eyes to warrant mention and deduct a star, do not for a moment take away from the beauty and profundity of the rest of this work. I am very glad to have had the chance to read it; it has challenged me both intellectually and spiritually, and I have given it to my (late teenage) children to read and discuss with me. It is absolutely worth reading, and you WILL get a lot out of it. Just be ready for the challenge.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 25, 2025

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