You can jerry-rig with aluminum foil Also useful as a flame-tamer.
Where were you, nutrax, before I spent a ton of money on that cast-iron thing? (Just kidding; I think it was about eight dollars.)
Your photo made me smile, because I use aluminum foil when I make popcorn. I pop corn on the stovetop in an old Club Aluminum 1.5-quart pot. Two level tablespoons of kernels make just a little too much popcorn for that pot, so I extend its height by wrapping a ring of folded aluminum foil around it.

Careful if your burner is big, the reducer isn't and the flames if turned high can burn the pot handle...and your fingers.
Thanks for the warning, Donkeystone. In fact, the smallest flame on my gas range comes from a circle smaller in diameter than my little coffeemaker. It acts as a "simmer" setting for larger pots, but will be enough to heat that small pot without the flames lapping at the sides or handle.
The stove in my last house has 2 medium sized flames one extra large one and one small one. I think I used the small one twice in the 14 or so years I had it. It just wasn't convenient for me.
I used that small flame today when I made a meal of potatoes, onions, and eggs in a cast-iron frying pan. I sautéed the chopped potatoes in olive oil over that low flame, which takes a while longer but won't result in potatoes that burn on the outside without being cooked through. I tossed the onions in when the potatoes were about 3/4 done. When the potatoes and onions were cooked, I turn them out onto paper toweling to drain any excess oil, then poured beaten eggs into the pan and swirled them and scrambled them. Mmm, good.
According to Wikipedia, nutrax, kitchenware is one of the few consumer products in which Bakelite is still used. A snip from Wikipedia:
Phenolics are seldom used in general consumer products today....An exception to this overall decline is their use in small precision-shaped components where their specific properties are required, such as molded disc brake cylinders, saucepan handles, electrical plugs and switches and parts for electrical irons.
Emphasis added.
*NorthAmerican....
Are you in a part of The USA that has any Russian/Eastern Europe Shops?
There are some in Chicago and New York.
I have one of these and it's not only cheap, but excellent - too.
Coffee at its finest....
http://www.alibaba.com/product-gs/429199622/coffee<u>maker_KPC_SN100A_900A</u>/showimage.html
To battybilly: Yes, there's a Ukrainian shop that has been here for at least 30 or 40 years, and a Russian shop that opened more recently. But I already have two pots similar to what you show at your link; click on the words "moka express" in my OP.
Thanks for the link, though; it would have been a lifesaver if I didn't already have a couple of coffee pots of that type.