A brief history of coffee in Russia

For the first time, our compatriots tasted coffee during the reign of Alexei Mikhailovich … and were dissatisfied! Loved by many nowadays, the drink was drunk reluctantly four centuries ago, like a bitter medicine. A European doctor prescribed coffee for the tsar “from the main disease”, and the miraculous decoction, apparently, helped to cope with severe migraine.

Coffee versus vodka

The first Russian ruler who “tasted” coffee was Peter the Great. During the opening of the Kunstkammer in 1714, he ordered “… not only to let everyone here for free, but if anyone comes with a company to see rarities, then treat them to a cup of coffee or a glass of vodka at my expense…”. Alas, it is not known for certain which of the visitors chose the “white”, and who – a foreign drink. The sovereign himself became addicted to coffee during the Great Embassy, when he was visiting the Mayor of Amsterdam Nicolaas Witsen. By the end of the XVII century, the Dutch owned coffee plantations in their colonies in Java, Sumatra and Ceylon. That is why throughout the XVIII century coffee came to Russia from Holland. Peter I liked to shock his entourage by suddenly appearing at their house with a demand to urgently pour him a cup of hot coffee, but not everyone could please the sovereign. The first coffee houses in St. Petersburg opened already at the end of Peter’s reign. In 1724, by decree of the emperor, fifteen taverns appeared in the capital, whose visitors (mostly foreigners) were served coffee.

В каирской кофейне. Художник К. Маковский

In the era of palace coups, coffee became the drink of the Russian aristocracy. The attitude towards him, however, was still ambiguous. The poet Antiochus Cantemir, for example, called coffee “the swill that India sends”, but at the same time he understood the varieties of “swill” well: “We all know that that vegetable, fried, finely ground and boiled in water, serves instead of breakfast, and whimsical and fun after lunch. The best coffee comes from Arabia, but in all the Indies that vegetable is abundant.” By “Indies” Cantemir meant the East and West Indies (Brazil). By the way, Europeans in those years also treated the drink in two ways: the British, French and Dutch enjoyed its taste, and the Germans banned consumption – sometimes even legally.

Interestingly, Sophia Augusta Frederica of Anhalt-Zerbst, who arrived from Prussian Stettin (she is the future Catherine II) unlike her fellow countrymen, she adored coffee and could drink up to five cups in the morning. The empress brewed the drink on her own – contemporaries claimed that a rare person would have liked such strong coffee. During the reign of Catherine the Great, fortune-telling on coffee grounds became a popular entertainment of the aristocracy.

A delight for the nobility

Throughout the XVIII century, coffee remained a drink “for the elite”. In 1791, when signing the Iasi Peace, the Russian delegation received a diplomatic gift from the Turks: 37 pounds of coffee and jewelry. The vast majority of the inhabitants of the Russian Empire at that time did not even know about coffee. The drink did not “go out” for a long time beyond the noble salons and a few restaurants. Everything changed during the Napoleonic Wars. When in 1805 the Russian troops were in Austria, the soldiers saw that the local population was consuming an unknown drink. The standard-bearer of the 2nd Moscow Musketeer Regiment, Ivan Butovsky, said that the soldiers nicknamed Austrian coffee “kava” and slurped it with a spoon from large plates – just like cabbage soup.

Дореволюционная реклама кофе

In the Russian Empire of the XIX century, the most expensive Arabian coffee cost 30 rubles per pood, and cheap Brazilian coffee cost about 17 rubles. He did not make a serious competition for tea. At the beginning of the twentieth century, imports between these drinks differed tenfold. Coffee did not become a popular drink, but it fell in love with representatives of the nobility and creative intelligentsia. Opera singer Fyodor Chaliapin recalled that he tried coffee at the age of 16, when he worked as a scribe in court: “Here for the first time I experienced the pleasure of drinking coffee – a drink unknown to me until that time. They gave coffee with cream for a nickel per glass. I received a salary of 15 rubles and, of course, could not enjoy coffee every day…”.

Difficult times

A year before the outbreak of the First World War, coffee imports to Russia amounted to 12 thousand tons per year. The drink became more affordable – one cup in a coffee shop cost two kopecks. However, the war dramatically changed the situation. The government imposes increased duties on luxury, and the elite drink is among the highly taxed products. After the February Revolution, 30 kopecks were already asked for a cup of coffee, and during the Civil War, the drink was almost forgotten altogether. However, there is a cheap alternative – the so-called coffee from acorns. To prepare the drink, the acorns were peeled, sliced, dried on the stove, poured with boiling water, and then fried over low heat. The resulting substance was ground with a coffee grinder and “seasoned” with a pinch of real scarce coffee – for the smell.

Реклама кофе «Богатырь». Конец XIX – начало XX века

Imported coffee returned to Russia during the NEP years, but it was quite expensive. By the 1930s, the cost of a kilogram of grains was eleven rubles, and during the war, the drink again became scarce. A curious episode occurred on the eve of the Victory Day Parade on June 24, 1945. Soviet soldiers recalled that on the night before the parade they were picked up and handed each a glass of coffee for cheerfulness.

The heyday of coffee consumption in the Soviet Union occurred during the Brezhnev period. The Secretary General himself was not averse to starting the morning with a cup of coffee diluted with milk. Then the popularity of the drink increased by one and a half times. Most of the goods came from Brazil, India was in second place, and since 1972, the production of its own instant coffee began in the USSR. Coffee drinks had different names – “Summer”, “Baltic”, “News” – but the composition was about the same. In addition to the coffee beans themselves, they contained chicory, barley and soy. In addition, coffee was sold by weight in grains, packed in paper bags. To date, coffee in our country has defeated tea in the struggle for popularity: a 2019 study showed that Russians choose it almost one and a half times more often.

source :

https://histrf.ru/read/articles/kratkaya-istoriya-kofe-v-rossii-ot-lekarstva-protiv-golovnoy-boli-do-narodnogo-napitka

The history of coffee in Russia

In 1665, the court doctor prescribed to Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich “a medicine against over-moods, runny noses and glavobolenii.”

Peter I, during his “internship” abroad, visited Holland in 1697 and, after living in the house of a merchant and burgomaster of Amsterdam, became addicted to coffee. The drink was then sold in pharmacies. He was credited with amazing medicinal properties: “… drains any runny nose and cures colds, relieves winds, strengthens the liver; an excellent remedy against scabies and blood spoilage; relieves the heart and vital beating of such, brings relief to sufferers of stomach pains and lack of appetite,” etc. Returning back to his homeland, Peter issued a special decree ordering all subjects to drink coffee both privately and at official assemblies. Later, it was even offered to visitors of the Kunstkamera. Of course, such drastic measures provoked a severe rebuke from the most conservative part of the population, in particular, from the patriarch and other representatives of the clergy. Tea also fell into the same disfavor: “Tea is cursed at three cathedrals, and coffee at seven,” “Whoever drinks tea despairs of God, whoever drinks coffee imposes a coven on Christ.” Such arguments have become part of the general criticism of the transition to the European way of life, hidden from the official authorities.

Extravagant in his actions, Peter liked to shock the courtiers with unexpected appearances at their home with the demand to pour him a cup of coffee. The nobles were ready to do everything to please the obstinate sovereign. They went to special coffee houses to buy coffee. The first of them, of course, appeared in the capital St. Petersburg. In 1724, by decree of Peter I, 15 taverns were opened here for foreigners accustomed to the coffee tradition. Anna Ioannovna was a passionate fan of this drink: every morning she certainly started with a cup of coffee served directly to bed. At the same time, all drinking establishments were regulated, including coffee shops, in which it was allowed to serve “one coffee, tea, shekolad and tobacco”. The first coffee shop of this kind was Dominic Ritz Aport’s tavern on Nevsky Prospekt, located in the building of the Lutheran Church of Peter and Paul.

Кофейня. Источник: Pinterest

Catherine II was even more fond of coffee, and the drink had to be especially strong: she drank up to 5 cups every morning, which took about 400 grams of ground grains, but then the Empress felt cheerful and energetic throughout the day. A funny case is known when her secretary Yakov Kozmin came to the Empress with a report. It was very cold, and the queen, wanting to help her subject warm up, offered him a cup of strong coffee. However, the effect was the opposite: the poor fellow became so ill that he almost died from a strong heartbeat.

At the same time, divination on coffee grounds becomes a popular entertainment, the first mention of which dates back to 1747. Unlike other witchcraft methods, this type of divination was considered less reprehensible, and by the 1760s even printed books with instructions for divination appeared. In Novikov’s famous satirical magazine, The Painter, it was reported about the ease with which “a whole sheet of ladies, girls and men can be presented, which, in case of accidents, are sent for coffee pots.” Specially trained women were called “Coffee makers” who, “looking at the different features and types of boiled coffee stuck to the sides of the cup, make different guesses to satisfy the superstitious on their demands or explanations.” There is another legend that in 1799 Emperor Paul I hosted a gypsy woman who allegedly guessed his imminent demise.

Трапеза. Источник: Pinterest

At the beginning of the 19th century, the most famous coffee house was the “Confectionary of Wolf and Beranger”, which was a real center of intellectual St. Petersburg. Legend has it that Pushkin was the last to visit her before his fatal duel with Georges Dantes. The international horticulture exhibition, held in 1884 in St. Petersburg, played a special role in the history of Russian coffee. The exhibition was visited by Brazilian farmers who brought the best samples of varietal coffee, which surprised local coffee lovers a lot and significantly replenished their wallets — a huge number of contracts for the supply of Brazilian coffee were concluded. After this exhibition, the import of coffee to Russia has almost doubled — from 8 to 12 tons.

With the beginning of the revolution, the coffee culture was somewhat lost due to the high cost. Only with the flourishing of trade during the NEP years was it possible to partially restore the former love for this drink. “Coffee”, as it was then called, became a necessary attribute of the daily life of the Soviet bourgeois-napman, although the common people treated this drink with distrust. And even the series of stories “Lenin and coffee” (by analogy with “Lenin and the children”) did not save the “dew of cheerfulness”. The post-war Khrushchev “thaw” returned coffee to the mass consumer, allowing its free sale – though not for long. Like tea, it soon became a very scarce product, and cheaper chicory or such specific drinks as acorn or barley coffee became its substitute. After the Soviet consumer got bored with coffee substitutes, by 1991 instant coffee of Colombian or Brazilian production appeared on sale. This trend persists in everyday popular culture to this day.

Реклама кофе в журнале «Огонек». Источник: Pinterest

It is worth focusing on the traditional Russian ways of making coffee. Like tea, coffee was brewed in a special samovar, which was a cylindrical vessel, the lower part of which was decorated with a figured lattice (an opening for air circulation), a crane with a figured burdock, and inside a removable frame was put on the brazier pipe, to which a canvas bag for ground coffee beans was suspended. At the turn of the century, new appliances for making tea and coffee were borrowed from Europe (from the French. bouillotte — a small kettle, a hot water bottle). These were vessels with a tap on a stand with an alcohol lamp, designed for 1-2 liters of the finished drink.

Традиционный русский «самовар» для кофе. Источник: Pinterest

In conclusion, here is a recipe for traditional “Russian coffee” published in 1900 by the court cook Yu. Mikhailov in his book “Healthy home table”.

“In a non-tinned red copper coffee pot, 3 tablespoons of roasted ground coffee and ½ teaspoon of chicory are placed on 5 glasses. Brewed with boiling water and then boiled. Several times the coffee boiled in this way is put for 5 minutes away from the fire to allow it to settle thicker. The grounds are deposited very well if you throw hot coal into the coffee pot itself. Then the coffee is carefully poured so as not to shake the grounds.”

source:

https://diletant.media/articles/36577000/

Coffee throughout history .. Quick overview

Coffee in Arabic means wine, and it also comes from the verb kaha because it is a coffee-go – appetite by eating. Some of them said they came from the kava region Kaffa in Ethiopia. The word turned from coffee in Arabic to cave in Turkish Kahva, and in Italian they called it Caffè . Then she entered the English language in the history of 1582 through the German language.

With a number of myths centered around the discovery of coffee, the way it was discovered is still different, perhaps the story of Khalidi “ Shepherd of the sheep” is the most famous, who noticed that his sheep became active and did not sleep at night after eating a particular plant .

Some of them said that it was discovered from Yemen by Omar al-Shazli(Abu al-Hassan al-Shazli) of the Sufis, who became famous as a healer in the Yemeni village of Al-Mukha, before being a healer was exiled from the Yemeni village of Al-Mukha and when he was hungry, he found near Wahab in Yemen cherries and began to eat them and found them once, he decided to Homs it became harsh, then tried to boil it to soften but it took out a brown liquid with an aromatic smell.

He drank from it and felt energy and health for days, and the story of the “magic drink” reached the village of Mukha, they allowed him to return and made him an elder. For this reason you may see some up to the present day call it “chadliya”.

XV century

The first export of coffee was from Ethiopia to Yemen, where the first cultivation of the coffee plant took place in Yemen. Yemen was also considered in that era the main center of coffee production in the world, and was the first documented evidence of the emergence of coffee in Yemen among Sufis so coffee was associated with Islam and is considered “Islamic drink” because the Sufis use it to strengthen them in worship, there was the first process of hummus and preparation of coffee.In the year of the Holy Quran, coffee arrived in Mecca and became known there due to being the Islamic alternative to wine.

Opening of cafes

Where Islam spread, coffee spread at the turn of the fifteenth century and reached Egypt and the Levant, where coffee shops were opened in Cairo around Al-Azhar University and in Syria and Mecca (there are no documented dates for the simultaneous opening of coffee shops in this period).In the era of the Ottoman Empire in Turkey opened the first cafe “historically recorded”, which was opened by two Syrians, one from Aleppo and the other from Damascus.

Cafes became a place for the exchange of science between imams and students and also where poems spread and began to grow in popularity and spread. Note that the first appearance of cafes in history was in Mecca, and issued fatwas from different sheikhs launched from Mecca to different places prohibiting coffee in 1511 ad due to its effect on the body and likening it to alcohol, but coffee lovers fought the decision and after the men of Science confirmed that it does not miss the mind was issued fatwas to dissolve it later.

In the Ottoman era, a new way of preparing coffee “ Turkish coffee “ was discovered and admired by the ruler and soon spread in the Ottoman state and became served in cafes and the person attending it was named kahfji .

Sixteenth century

It was in this era that coffee began to move to Europe via the Ottoman Empire and through Yemen directly from the port of Mokha, which is pronounced in English Moka RIA .

Important information: the name Mocha was named from the Yemeni port of mocharr ” Mocha means a strain of coffee, not a drink”.

In 1657, he  following his tour of the Middle East by taking coffee beans and teaching the French how to prepare coffee . This was the first acquaintance of the French with coffee.

The first appearance of coffee cultivation in India in the history of 1670 ad, through Baba Budan, who stole 7 beans from the port of Mokha while he spent the Hajj and was returning to his country and planted them in the hills of shikmaglor.

Coffee spread in Austria after the loss of the Muslims in the Battle of Vienna in 1683, where the Austrians seized the spoils of the Muslims, which included Turkish coffee pots and coffee bags they believed to be food for camels until one of the warriorsr LR Lu DL NL spent two years in captivity with the Turks so he knew what the bags were and took them. It is from the spoils that the first cafe was opened in Vienna . It is disputed whether the kulchiki were the first to open a cafe in Vienna or the Armenian مقهى but what we know for sure is that the Austrian tradition of adding milk to coffee to drink coffee dates back tou vczycki .

XVII century

The Dutch grew some of the coffee, which was purchased from the port of Mokha in 1719 and was grown in the colony of Java in Indonesia, so we have a coffee called Java.

Coffee arrived in the United States in 1720 by captainrrlll who was sent by the French King Louis to the Caribbean island of Martinique, and spread to Haiti, Mexico, and elsewhere. In 1727, the king of Portugal sentr toأخذ to take coffee beans from the French and in his own ways he was able to acquire them and grow them in Brazil. Brazil is now the world’s largest exporter of coffee .

Espresso story

In 1884, Angelo morindol LR LR was the first Innovator of the espresso machine, unlike the espresso machines used now, the tool was large and did not bring the espresso in the desired face. After 17 years the Luigi Bezzera add after modifications such as steam pressure, and took a patent on them 1901 under the title of” Innovations in the machinery to prepare and immediately serve coffee beverage” the invention of the machine is quick to prepare draft coffee . In 1905, the Italian bought the Patent and began to manufacture it commercially .

Instant coffee

It was invented in 1881 by a Al Al Al in France . In 1890 m in need the David Strang patented it and started selling it under the name Strang’s Coffee was on the patented “Dry Hot-Air”, also have been attributed to the world Japanese Satori Kato in 1901 m which was presented in Buffalo, New York in an exhibition . George constant Louis Washington developed his own instant coffee and began selling it commercially in 1910 . In 1938, the Swiss company Nestle created “Nescafe” as a trademark and began selling it commercially in Switzerland, Nescafe found when the Brazilian government contacted Nestle to find a solution to its coffee surplus.

The first coffee wave

I focused on mass production and sacrificed taste and quality for profitability . It was pioneered by Nescafe as Nestle, Nescafe Maxwell House Maxwell House and for Folgers where he was a product of this wave is instant coffee .

Second coffee wave

In 1966, the pioneers of this wave were starbucksrrr and Coffee House بيت ‘ الموجة, the second wave contributed to the introduction of espresso to the world and the spread of drinks such as latte, cappuccino, Americano, Mocha and others.Starbucks was the leader in the second wave, with many around the world following the steps of Starbucks as a structural project, where it focuses on the expansion side by increasing the number of branches, which leads to a decrease in the ability to control the quality of coffee, resulting in a lack of quality and continuity in taste.

The third coffee wave

In 2002 the third wave was mentioned. It is a movement to raise the quality of coffee that includes the quality of cultivation, production, harvesting, processing, freshness of roasting, preparation of coffee with high standards of quality. Transparency is an important aspect of competent coffee where the barista can give you information such as: the history of the chickpeas, from which region, and the method of processing. The third wave is called competent coffee because the coffee is rated above 80 out of 100 by an ICO-certified evaluator. It uses different methods such as drawing tools, distillation tools such as Chemex, وال 60 and others.

To this day, coffee still hybridizes with new hands and in different ways .. See what’s next

This is how coffee Changed Britain forever

Coffeehouses helped spread modern democracy, spur the Enlightenment and birth periodical literature. So why did King Charles II’s cronies try to ban them?

This story is adapted from the In Our Time radio programme episode Coffee, produced by Simon Tillotson. Listen to more episodes of In Our Time from BBC Radio 4 here.

Passers-by would be forgiven to miss the Pasqua Rosee plaque, tucked in an alley off the City of London’s historical Cornhill ward.

But if you walk past the cobbled streets of Leadenhall Market up to Cornhill and head into the alley behind the bank-turned-pub The Crosse Keys, you might spot a small framed sign heralding the arrival of a drink that forever changed Britain.

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It’s easy to miss the small sign marking the arrival of a drink that forever changed England (Credit: Nathaniel Noir/Alamy)

“Here stood the first London coffeehouse at the sign of Pasqua Rosee’s head, 1652,” it reads. The commemorative ceramic tablet lies just outside the walls of the Victorian Jamaica Wine House in the heart of the labyrinthine St Michael’s Alley.

Pasqua Rosee was an Armenian-born servant of a British merchant named Daniel Edwards employed by the Levant Company, which once monopolised England’s trade with the Ottoman Empire. In 1652, Rosee opened a coffee-serving stall in St Michael’s churchyard to entertain Edwards’ guests. Edwards had grown weary of hosting guests in his home, and so Rosee’s shed, conveniently located near the Royal Exchange centre of commerce, became the go-to hub where London’s merchants congregated each day. Within a year or two, Rosee had earned enough revenue from selling his energy-inducing drink to upgrade from a stall to a store across the alley.

Coffee began to spread as a way for religious devotees to remain alert and worship until the early hours of the morning

Coffee’s long journey to London started hundreds years earlier in the hills of north-east Africa. According to Jeanette M Fregulia’s book, A Rich and Tantalizing Brew: A History of How Coffee Connected the World, in the 9th Century, an Ethiopian goatherder named Kaldi noticed his animals became particularly frolicsome once they’d nibbled on a certain berry bush, so he decided to try it himself. Once Kaldi tasted the plant, legend has it “poetry and song spilled out of him.”

Coffee is believed to have spread from Ethiopia, where it helped religious devotees pray long into the night (Credit: Sergi Reboredo/Alamy)

Coffee is believed to have spread from Ethiopia, where it helped religious devotees pray long into the night (Credit: Sergi Reboredo/Alamy)

According to Judith Hawley, professor of 18th-Century literature at Royal Holloway, University of London, other variants of the tale describe an imam or monk coming across Kaldi after he’d eaten the berries, and noticing the plant’s stimulating effects. After sampling the berries himself, the religious man stayed up and prayed long into the night. Soon, coffee began to spread as a way for religious devotees to remain alert and worship until the early hours of the morning.

“This was particularly important for Sufism, the very mystic strand of Islam… coffee is what made the dervishes whirl,” Hawley explained.

By the 16th Century, coffee had reached Constantinople and became a staple in the Ottoman Empire’s culture of hospitality, where the earliest coffeehouses developed as a space for men to meet and relax in the afternoons. One of the earliest non-alcoholic sociable drinks in the Ottoman Empire, coffee was served wherever men negotiated and traded, and the practice of consuming it communally gradually spread west. Decades later, when coffee first arrived in Eastern Europe, Italy and later in England, it was used as a medicinal ailment for a range of maladies, from gout to kidney stones, said Jonathan Morris, a modern history professor at the University of Hertfordshire.

Coffeehouses were a staple in the Ottoman Empire, where they developed as spaces for men to meet, relax and trade (Credit: Historic Collection/Alamy)

According to Morris, the coffee initially consumed in England in the 17th Century was likely akin to modern-day Turkish coffee, albeit using stale coffee grounds given the long journey from the plant’s production hubs in Mocha, modern-day Yemen. Despite the bitter taste, early British drinkers widely praised coffee’s reviving effect, with one account reported in Morris’ book, Coffee: A Global History, describing it as “a Turkish-kind of drink… somewhat hot and unpleasant [but with] a good after relish”.

The explosion of coffeehouses across London coincided with the build-up to the early Enlightenment period

Rosee’s business experienced quick success, in part because it was situated in the city’s budding commercial and financial centre. Morris’ book explains how neighbouring tavern-keepers claimed Rosee was stealing their business, as merchants gathered to sip the stimulating drink under the awning of his stall, and later, inside his wood-panelled store.

London’s coffee-drinking culture soon spread beyond St Michael’s Alley, as coffeehouses replaced taverns as spaces for businessmen to socialise. By 1663, less than a decade after Pasqua Rosee’s stall first opened, there were 83 coffeehouses in London. These early coffeehouses had an almost exclusively male clientele.

The first coffee sold in London was from stalls, which eventually transformed into indoor cafes (Credit: duncan 1890/Getty Images)

“I think [this emerged from] a desire for men to talk business – whether their business was law or trade or the new science,” said Hawley. “Coffeehouses provided a number of things that taverns didn’t.”

In a uniquely egalitarian model of sociability, men gathered around a long table at most coffeehouses to talk business, but also to discuss news, politics and ideas. The explosion of coffeehouses across London coincided with the build-up to the early Enlightenment period, and coffeehouses played a key role in that.

The king feared that coffee may provoke instigation or the plotting of violence against the throne

“That mixture of news reading, discussion, sharing of ideas [was] absolutely crucial to the rapid spread of the coffeehouse during a period of rapid rise of knowledge,” Hawley explained. It was also the birthplace of periodical literature in England, whereby Hawley said “the coffeehouse was put on paper” in the form of essays. The periodicals Tatler and The Spectator were founded in 1709 and 1711, respectively, through collecting stories from the coffeeshops, which further forged them as the foremost place to learn the latest news.

England’s early coffeehouses helped usher in the Enlightenment and birthed periodical literature (Credit: CPA Media Pte Ltd/Alamy)

However, some thought this open sharing of news and political ideas was a threat to the monarchy. In 1675, King Charles II’s ministers attempted to suppress and close down coffeehouses on the grounds of their “evil and dangerous effects”. The king feared that coffee may provoke instigation or the plotting of violence against the throne and ordered the “close of coffee-houses altogether”, although he later withdrew the ban two days before it was to be put into effect, Brian Cowan writes in The Social Life of Coffee: The Emergence of the British Coffeehouse.

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Beyond London, coffeehouses proliferated in port cities like Bristol, York and Norwich, where a burgeoning culture of reading and writing within coffeehouses flourished. According to Cowan, coffeehouses became an essential part of the mise-en-scène for understanding the post-Restoration “urban renaissance” in England, as public debate pivotally influenced the development of modern democratic culture and civility. Coffeehouse patrons honed their politeness, as it was believed that gentlemanly conduct facilitated the capacity for the scientific argument. This “bourgeois revolution,” Cowan explained, coincided with a “commercial revolution” and uptick in overseas trade.

They gossiped like women and then when they came home… [were] no good for anything… coffee houses made men impotent

However, in addition to coffee’s perceived political threat, it was also believed to be a threat to British masculinity, as some thought coffeehouses made men more effeminate. “They gossiped like women and then when they came home… [were] no good for anything… coffee houses made men impotent,” explained Hawley of the prevailing perception at the time. According to Cowan, some critics even argued that coffeehouses condoned feminine mannerisms among men – a sentiment that lingered for decades to come.

The British established coffee plantations in modern-day Sri Lanka, Kenya, Guyana and elsewhere (Credit: Universal Images Group North America LLC/Alamy)

As coffee continued its spread across Europe in the 17th Century, imperialist countries established coffee plantations in their colonies to meet growing demand back home. According to Morris, France became one of the largest producers, planting coffee across Saint-Domingue (modern-day Haiti). By the 1760s, enslaved people on Saint-Domingue produced more than half the world’s coffee. As Enlightenment ideas reached Saint-Domingue, enslaved people began calling for their rights, leading to the Haitian revolution and the young, black-majority country’s independence in 1804.

The emancipation of Haiti’s former enslaved people was a turning point for coffee around the world. With 1,000 plantations destroyed, Haiti’s coffee industry collapsed, according to Morris. Coffee drinking subsequently declined in Britain, particularly as tea drinking became more widespread. The early 19th Century saw Britain expanding coffee production in Ceylon (Sri Lanka) and India, but an outbreak of rust caused by the fungus Hemileia vastatrix destroyed coffee plantations in both colonies over the course of a decade. The plantations were thereby converted to tea growing, cementing the leaf’s role as the drink of choice in Britain.

As drinking fads shifted in Britain during the second half of the 18th and early 19th Centuries, so too did coffeehouses, which became more exclusive. Some, such as those around St James’ in London, evolved into elite, members-only institutions associated with gambling.

Over time, many of England’s early coffeehouses started catering to elite clientele, such as Mol’s in Exeter (Credit: travelbild/Alamy)

“People accused [coffee] of wasting their time, when they should have been working. People also accused it of being an exotic luxury, wasting the nation’s hard currency for product which has no nutritional value. This sort of connection between physiological fear of the effects that coffee was having on British masculinity [became] a vector for hostility to coffeehouses,” said Markman Ellis, a professor of 18th Century studies at Queen Mary University of London.

The dramatic decline of coffee consumption in 19th-Century Britain happened just as coffee took off in North America, with Brazil’s rise as a crucial coffee producer on the backs of African slave labour. According to Hawley, in Britain “[coffee has] never fully recovered” to the pivotal place it held at its introduction in the 17th-Century British Isles.

While England and its empire largely become tea-drinking societies by the 1820s, the re-emergence of coffee and coffeehouse culture in the UK is undeniable in recent decades.

Today, it seems like every city centre in Britain is filled with international coffee chains (Credit: SOPA Images/Getty Images)

Today, it seems like every British town has an international coffee chain and Instagram-friendly espresso bars are popping up faster than you can say “third-wave coffee”. The popularity of Italian-style British cafes has led to espressos, cappuccinos and lattes becoming commonplace British drinks. In the past decade, many pubs have even started serving coffee in the daytime to compete in this relatively novel market.

Coffeeshops are opening as more pubs are closing

“We can date the contemporary coffeehouse moment back to the mid-1990s, that’s the moment when it really takes off,” Morris explained of the rebirth of the UK’s coffeeshop culture, when chains like Costa Coffee and Caffè Nero formed in the UK. “Coffeeshops are opening as more pubs are closing; the number of pubs has gone down, year-on-year-on-year, [while] the number of coffeeshops has gone up. In effect, the coffeeshop has sort of taken over as a social space from the traditional pub.”

More than 350 years after Pasqua Rosee set up his humble stall in London, it seems that coffeeshops are once again reclaiming their original role as the go-to space for Britons to socialise, spread news and share new ideas.

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By Yasmin El-Beih BBC

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What is the secret of the global passion for coffee?

Coffee was once a little-known delicacy used to aid religious rituals.

But once it had begun its global expansion, it became an unstoppable force.

It’s a rich dark liquid that flows across the world and greases the wheels of our economies. It’s one of the most traded commodities. And there are fears that, with a seemingly irrepressible demand, we may one day run dry.

No, I’m not talking about oil, but coffee. More than two billion “cups of joe” are drunk every day and for many, working life would feel impossible without it. As traditionally tea-drinking countries like China are seduced by coffee’s charms, it may soon become the world’s favourite drink.

What is driving this insatiable thirst, and how has the beverage come to conquer the world? Is it the abrasive but aromatic flavours, its psychoactive effects or its social currency? And how can its farmers overcome the challenges created by human-made climate change?

Coffee’s story starts in the lush highlands of Ethiopia, the natural homeland of the delicate Coffea arabica plant. Although they are called “coffee beans”, the plant is not a legume, and the fruits of the coffee tree look more like cherries when they are first picked. The seeds inside are extracted and dried before the process of roasting turns them into the hard, nutty nodules we feed into our grinders.

The Oromo people from this region are thought to have been the first to have noticed the stimulating effects of these “beans”, and coffee still remains an important element of their traditional cuisine. Exactly how and when it spread beyond Ethiopia is still the subject of many legends, but the available historic records suggest that the Sufis of Yemen were the first truly devoted drinkers outside Africa in the Middle Ages – where it was intimately connected with their mystic rituals.

“Never was a religious ceremony performed without coffee being drunk,” writes the food writer and cultural anthropologist Claudia Roden. Its caffeine helped them to continue their practices late into the night, while the roasting of the bean was apparently taken as an analogy for the transcendence of the human soul.

Coffee houses soon spread across the Middle East and the Ottoman Empire, where they caught the attention of Western traders, who took the beguiling drink back to their home countries in the 17th Century. The early drinkers were firm believers in its medicinal properties. Roden quotes one newspaper advert in 1657 that described the drink as “having many excellent virtues, closes the orifice of the stomack, fortifies the heart within, helpeth dijestion, quickneth the spirits…”

These observations have been born out by recent studies, which suggest that coffee can offer some protection from certain common diseases. A recent review of the evidence by Susanna Larsson at the Karolinska Institute in Sweden found that each cup of coffee per day is associated with a 6% reduction in the risk of type 2 diabetes. Laura Van Dongen at Wageningen University in the Netherlands, meanwhile, has found that regular coffee drinkers were at least 20% less likely to die from heart disease.

Besides providing this reportedly life-enhancing drink, the early European coffee houses also became popular meeting places for businessmen – and some even birthed the financial institutions we still turn to today. The insurance company Lloyds of London, for instance, emerged from the Lloyds Coffee Shop in the 18th Century, where sailors and merchants would meet to discuss their affairs.

European settlers would also come to introduce the plant to their colonies in Asia and South America: Portugal brought coffee to Brazil, France to Vietnam, and Spain to Colombia. The sale of coffee was intimately linked with the slave trade, which was not abolished until the 1850s in Colombia and the 1880s in Brazil.

Coffee still remains vital for these countries’ economies, and Brazil, Vietnam and Colombia are today the three biggest producers of the raw coffee bean, while the United States, Germany and France are the biggest importers.

A delicate balance

Even with today’s agricultural technologies, coffee is a notoriously difficult crop to grow.

The plants that produce Arabica coffee beans – the most aromatic kind favoured by the majority of drinkers – are very sensitive to the climate: they thrive in a narrow temperature band of 15-24C and require plenty of rainfall. And just as the quality of wine depends on the terroir of grapes, the taste of each coffee blend will be shaped by the conditions in which the beans are grown.

The state of Minas Gerais in Brazil provides almost perfect conditions. At one of the state’s farms, called Daterra, chief agronomist João Reis explains how the seeds are first planted in bags filled with nutrient-rich manure and compost. The farm’s location – 1,000m above sea level – offers the perfect wet and cool climate for the seeds to germinate. Even so, the young leaves are made of such delicate tissue that they have to be kept under shade to avoid too much direct sunlight.

After six months, the small trees are ready to be planted – but they still require meticulous care to ensure they receive enough water. Once they reach maturity, the plants will begin to blossom with white flowers that will eventually fall away to reveal the cherries that contain the beans. Overall, it takes around two and a half years until the first crop can be harvested – meaning a long lag before the farmer can see a return on his or her investment. The plants are biennial, meaning that they will only produce a full yield every couple of years after that point.

The harvest only begins after a quality control manager has tasted the beans to ensure they are of optimum quality. Once they are taken from the trees, they are sorted, washed and graded and then laid out on a vast patio to dry. They are then vacuum-packed and loaded onto trucks, ready for transit.

Worldwide, the cultivation and production of coffee supports more than 120 million workers and their families, many of whom feel extremely passionate about their profession, including Suely Di Souza at the Daterra farm.

Her husband had been working on the farm for seven years before her, she says. “I looked through the window, while raising my children, and my dream was to be in the middle of the coffee beans.” When her daughter went to college, she finally took the opportunity to work there. With the other 300 workers on the farm, the job has provided a sense of community for De Souza Paiva that she would otherwise have been missing.

A recipe for growth

Cultivation is only one part of the story – before they can be drunk, the raw beans must be cooked. In countries such as Italy, with a long history of coffee culture dating to the 16th Century, the blending and roasting of the beans is considered an almost supernatural craft. “I’m like an alchemist because my process is magic,” says Leonardo Lelli, an artisan in Bologna.

Lelli says that during roasting, he pays attention to tiny changes from second to second. “I hear the cracks, and I watch the colour, and I smell the aromas, and only when it all feels right, I take out and cool the coffee.” And he tastes each batch before delivering it to his customers.

Italy’s coffee culture is also famous for its enviable espresso machines that extract more flavour from the grinds. Unlike a typical filter coffee, an espresso is brewed by forcing a lower volume of steaming water through the ground beans at high pressure. This results in a higher concentration drink, with the characteristic honey-coloured “crema” that floats at the top of the cup.

Espresso coffees can now be found in thousands of cities across the world. This is thanks, in part, to Howard Schultz, a manager at a little known coffee shop in Seattle, who fell in love with Italian espresso during a business trip to Milan. He would later buy out the owners and launch an aggressive expansion campaign that would lead his company – Starbucks – to become one of the most recognisable brands in the world.

It wasn’t just the flavour that had caught his attention, though: it was also the community that he saw within the coffee bars themselves. It represented a “third place” – between home and work – where people could enjoy a luxurious snack while they gather and gossip. Unlike a pub, say, the coffee bar was a suitable meeting place at any time of the day, for any age group.

“The Italians had created the theatre, romance, art and magic of experiencing espresso,” Schultz later said. “I was overwhelmed with a gut instinct that this is what we should be doing.” He wanted to recreate a similar kind of relaxing, hospitable environment in his own chain.

Whether or not Starbucks has succeeded in recreating the Italian experience is of course a matter of debate. But the popularity of artisanal coffee shops today certainly owes a lot to the recognition that coffee can be more than a simple caffeine kick. Today people care much more about the origins of the drink, its unique flavours, and the environment in which they drink it than ever before. And they see it as a way of connecting to others around them.

It is this celebration of the experience, rather than the beverage alone, that has driven coffee’s global success, says José Sette, the executive director of the International Coffee Organization. “Coffee is as popular as it is because it is a social currency,” he says. “It brings people together.”

This attitude, of course, dates right back to the start of coffee culture among the Sufis in the Middle East, where it remains central to many social rituals. “In this proverbially hospitable area, coffee is the symbol of hospitality,” wrote the cultural anthropologist Claudia Roden in her study of coffee. In the US and UK we may have forgotten those connections with our perfunctory consumption of instant coffee in the 50s, 60s and 70s, but we are now coming back full circle.

The challenge ahead

Today, even countries such as China – which have traditionally favoured tea – are now coming to appreciate coffee’s allure. As a sign of its growth, consider this: Starbucks opened their first store in Beijing 1999. Today, they open a new store in China every 15 hours.

Whereas most people had drunk instant coffee at home in the past, younger Chinese people are increasingly buying into its social appeal, as well as developing more refined tastes for artisan blends in speciality coffee shops. Sally Wu, the founder of Seesaw coffee, a chain of 22 speciality coffee shops, argues that the drink is now being appreciated in China like “fine wine”.

Between 1992 and 2017, there has been a 6% year-on-year growth in demand for coffee in Asia as a whole – which is around three times as fast as the rest of the world. “It’s a very exciting market,” says Sette. Even so, the demand in Asia is still very far behind that of more established coffee-drinking regions: in 2017, Japan was the largest consumer in Asia, drinking 4.5% of the world’s coffee, while South Korea, imported 2% and China and Hong Kong lagging at just 0.76% each. The USA, in contrast, imported 20%, and Germany 11%.

But there are obstacles to this growing thirst, the foremost being climate change. Remember that the Arabica plant is incredibly sensitive to heat and rainfall – meaning that rising global temperatures and more irregular weather spell trouble for its long-term survival.

One simulation by Oriana Ovalle-Rivera at the International Center for Tropical Agriculture in Colombia, for instance, predicts that Brazil will lose 25% of its suitable land for cultivating Arabica by 2050. At Daterra, the managers have already noticed that maintaining a high quality of bean, at a high yield, has become more challenging over the last 10 years, a fact that they put down to climate change.

Aaron Davis, a researcher at Kew Gardens, London, agrees that this is a serious problem. Since coffee plants are slow to develop, any unusual fluctuation in the climate could influence growth years later, he says. “So you only need a few or even one perturbation to have a have a big impact.”

Davis points out that in some countries, such as Ethiopia, areas at higher altitudes that were previously too chilly to grow the crop might become more suitable for coffee farms as temperatures shift. But that will cause huge disruptions. “It’ll be a situation that farmers growing coffee for generations won’t be growing coffee, and others will steadily find that they can,” he says. This is already happening in some areas, he says. “People are growing coffee at elevations where they weren’t growing and where it was grown, now not suitable… Coffee is moving.”

There may be other options. There are many species of coffee plant, besides Arabica – some of which are hardier. The most well-known, Coffea robusta, is already used for some drinks – including instant blends – though it is generally considered too bitter for most coffee aficionados. But other varieties may be more suitable. Using selective breeding, it may one day be possible to produce crops that are hardier than existing Arabica plants, but equally appealing in flavour. Farms like Daterra are already experimenting with different crops to try to achieve the best yield even in unstable climates.

For the millions of people currently involved in coffee’s cultivation and production, and indeed for any of us who enjoy a morning espresso to kickstart the day, let’s hope they succeed.

Image credits: Lion TV, Getty Images

Graphics sources: Oriana Ovalle-Rivera et al., Observatory for Economic Complexity

The world’s trading routes have been crafted over centuries and yet remain in a constant state of flux. Made on Earth looks at eight everyday products – from bicycles to whisky, spices to semiconductors – and explores the people, countries and intricate global networks that go into making and bringing these goods to market.

BY DAVID ROBSON BBC

https://www.bbc.com/future/bespoke/made-on-earth/how-the-world-came-to-run-on-coffee/

Yemeni Coffee: History and Fame

Historically, Yemen has been associated with coffee for centuries, particularly with the city of Mocha, which represented the starting point for the fame of this beverage locally and globally. Yemeni coffee is known in many cultures as “Mocha,” referring to the port of Mocha, which was a hub for coffee exports.

Origin of the Coffee Tree:

The coffee tree is evergreen, reaching heights of approximately 4.5 to 6 meters, with deep roots and soft leaves. Coffee is used as a hot or cold beverage, prized for its stimulating effect due to its caffeine content.

Origin and History of Coffee:

Opinions vary regarding the origin of the coffee tree and its wild existence. Some believe it originated in the Arabian Peninsula and was transported to Ethiopia. Some suggest that coffee first appeared wild in the Kaffa region of southern Ethiopia, while others propose that it was likely brought to Ethiopia from Yemen due to environmental similarities between the two countries.

Yemeni Connection to Coffee:

It is believed that Yemenis became acquainted with the coffee tree in the early 5th century AD when it was planted in the Al-Dain region. Some accounts credit the Arab physician Al-Razi as the first to mention Yemeni coffee in 900 AD.

Agricultural and Commercial Development:

Coffee cultivation in Yemen has witnessed significant development since the Middle Ages, making Yemeni coffee a prominent symbol of high quality. Yemeni coffee became synonymous with the port of Mocha, renowned for its high quality, and was traded to several countries.

Coffee Growing Regions:

Coffee shrubs thrive in various regions of Yemen, including Sana’a, Hajjah, Al-Dain, Yafi, due to the considerable similarity in climatic conditions between these areas.

Coffee Varieties Cultivated in Yemen:

Yemen cultivates three varieties of coffee known as the Al-Daini, Tufahi, and Dwayri, named after the regions where they are cultivated, such as Al-Hamadi, Al-Yafi, Al-Burai, Al-Harazi, Al-Mutri, and Al-Haimi.

History of coffee.. A boiled drink from the ancient heritage of the Arabs to the world

It was said in ancient times for coffee “qahawi”, and perhaps this word is still used when the people of the mountains areas of the northeast region in the UAE, and the word comes between “qahawi” or “coffee”, and whatever the name, it gives energy to the body, and stimulate emotions to work, and incite thought to search.

It is a drink of Arab Abyssinian origin that grew from a tree of various kinds, and is made from roasted seeds, from which different flavors and smells come out.despite the country of origin, coffee now comes from many countries in this world, so that the tropical climate becomes the most important to be planted, and thus develops into the so-called Global Coffee economy, and now it motivates us to delve into the history of coffee.

Attend

In our days, Coffee has become present in all social, educational, political and economic events, a strong presence in all its fragrant colors, it is universally agreed that it is on the one hand a catalyst for work, decisions and studies, and on the other hand influential in the human mind, it was not what repels it, because coffee farms are expanding day by day after these seeds have built their decent position in the export markets for international trade.

Linguistically

As the interpretation of coffee came in the dictionary of the Arabic language, it is “wine” in the heritage of the Arabs before Islam, as interpreted as boiled drink and pure milk, while some dictionaries went to interpret coffee fertile, but today the word has taken a turn to meet, as a cafe and forum for meeting, to develop into a daily and necessary climate, and when some weather drinking and mood can not do without.

Birth

If we know that coffee is originally a cultivated plant and therefore a fruit of a tree, then where is its origin, origin and Origin before it reaches all the peoples of the Earth? – Because we want this plant a description and identity, we returned to the French encyclopedia to find that it originated first in Abyssinia, (i.e. Ethiopia, to become this country the origin of coffee and its history, and other researchers went to document those trees that they are of the genus coffee and that they are from an Arab family, or as they Surrounded by a silver skin that adheres to it to match the seed which can be grinded.

One coffee farmer says that this fragrant and beautiful fruit, especially the Arab ones, that it is very sensitive and needs a rather cold climate, as it suits the lowlands, while the high mountains are less productive there.

But man and his intellectual nature and over time, renew what he has, to go to the hybridization of coffee by pollinating it easier to produce a new “genetic”, and pave the way to bring out this drink Rich in caffeine different taste and sometimes rare, and therefore classified luxurious, and this is what the Netherlands did, genetic modification has become one of the most important new global experiences, especially with regard to fields and agriculture.

Enemies of coffee

We all know that the rhythm of this world is sometimes ambiguous, otherwise where do Enemies appear, How do destinies change As well as coffee appeared to have a fungus called “coffee rust”, after watching a special program about coffee, we noticed the exit of deadly parasites attacking the leaves of the fruit to give it a different color, and this type of malicious parasites with a slow effect the fruit can not resist all the time, to become the relationship between them a confrontation between defeat and victory.

Coffee migration

We return again to coffee with a pale color and hot bitterness and appetite, which took spread from Ethiopia since the 15th century, to the Ottoman Empire, which will be controlled, and the Abyssinian name “kava” to be adopted by the Turks, and then enter through the Mediterranean trade to Venice in Italy in 1610, to be adopted by Britain as “coffee”.

This came from the author of the book “tea and chocolate” Sylvester Dufour, he explains about the spice trade, this great trade and the art of tasting coffee officially in Europe when it began through the Ottoman embassy there, to take it by the name of Turkish coffee “Turkish” and presented in a modern Turkish style at the time.

Between “cafe” and “Mokha”

When coffee entered France, and was adopted under the name “Cafe” after it came out with an official permit from its government, after examination in its laboratories and the description of the tree of the product with its seeds and farms, and even the roasting exam, the coffee took its full innocence to sit accredited in the councils of the French.

But there is a beautiful report written by a merchant named Philip in 1685, he was trading in spices, mentions how coffee was transported from the Yemeni port of Mokha and 4 thousand years ago, confirming that it grew for the first time in Yemen, reaching the old Red Sea ports, where the port of Suez, Jeddah and others after loading on ships.

Of course, there were other means of Transportation, namely land roads and transportation over camels, and a long caravan later goes to hajj with pilgrims before Islam, and therefore to Damascus and Aleppo, to become the discovery in the 15th century and spread in the 16th and 17th centuries late, there are forgotten beginnings going back thousands of years, to confirm that coffee is Arabic origin and origin.

Writers and celebrities of the greatest drinkers

French thinker and writer Voltaire, who lived in the 18th century, that is, in the age of enlightenment and the spread of coffee, exceeded his consumption of up to 12 large cups of coffee a day, and the amount increased until he died with coffee according to the report of his doctor, who wrote that he had died with”caffeine”, in his last years increased the amount of drinking to 54 cups a day, famous for saying “nothing is done without coffee”, especially after warning his friends of the unreasonable amounts consumed, because of the danger to his health, however he did not care about their statements and lived until he was 84 years old.

In the territory of Austria was “Beethoven” drink daily equivalent to 60 grains of coffee in each cup, especially during the creation of his music and put the melody, as well as the Danish philosopher “Kierkegaard” who is famous for his unusual way of making his coffee, as he stated in his memoirs that he was filling his coffee with a lot of sugar, and consumed daily about 50 cups.

If we go to the musician Johann Bach, it was the title of coffee after the peak of its consumption, as some testify that it was not without social problems caused by addiction to it, especially among the creative and famous classes.

Finally, politicians did not stop themselves from drinking coffee, and no doubt we can not ignore the most important political figures, the 26th president of the United States, Franklin Roosevelt, who drank 4 liters of coffee a day, a quantity that is closer to the imagination, as his son said in his diary: “it was like a bathtub”.

Myth of discovery and modern-day icon

There is a legend about the discovery of coffee that says that a shepherd made his flock consume fruits somewhere, not knowing that they are the fruits of coffee coffee, so that the pasture acquires full vitality, and this led to the shepherd’s curiosity to discover the fruits of the tree and thus discovered coffee.

Since that Abyssinian legend, it has become the most used Cities for coffee, which is the richest and most stable and developing, but coffee has become a cultural and intellectual mark, to enjoy the people who drink it in front of shoppers in the”malls” of the owners of social prosperity and behavioral sophistication, and play elegant and ceramic coffee cup and sparkles over the tables and in the hands of those who make it skillfully, a manifestation of the Times.

Coffee between the pleasure of meeting and the pain of prohibition

From the young coffee trees, which are 3 years old, to large trees in farms with abundant production, we go back to the 15th century to open cafes for this flavor stimulating the mind and body and in front of chess tables and poems, and low price, for everyone to use and meet around all layers of society, until it was declared banned by the Ottoman sultan in all his lands, including Egypt, because the drink is suspected of intoxicating wine, and those who drink this coffee are persecuted, despite the attempt of some to defend this drink because it is healthy for the mind and body.

The origins of Arabian hospitality in the UAE and the Gulf

In the UAE and the Arab Gulf countries, the origin of hospitality is Arabic coffee, served in small circular cups with dates or candy, while everything that happens these days in the family hospitality morning or afternoon of foods and varieties we know and do not know it is foreign to the Customs and heritage of reception established in the mind of the first, to exceed some customs in order to reach the concept of generosity, carrying another meaning that we can say the weight of change and change.

However, we still touch hospitality on its origins in the palaces of hospitality and Grand councils, and no matter what the progress of time, Arabic coffee still manifests itself among the guests, becoming the most important and supreme symbol of reception.

1630

This year, the “coffee house” was established in Constantinople, so that coffee houses spread rapidly and in large quantities throughout the cities of the world gradually until coffee later became the drink of pleasure, guests and storytellers.

1672

It was in this year that Pascal Armenian founded the first cafe in Paris, near the bridge “Neuf”, the very founder of a cafe in London in 1685, where he invented a new way of making coffee.

1675

This year, coffee drinking was recorded for the first time in Belgium, specifically near the castle of “Ferrer” in the presence of Louis XIV, where a Turkish diplomat presented him a coffee drink on the occasion of the Treaty of “Ferrer”, which some call the “coffee convention”.

Source: Reem Al-Kamali Al-Bayan newspaper

https://www.albayan.ae/five-senses/culture/2018-11-05-1.3401175

History Of Coffee: Where Did Coffee Originate And How Was It Discovered

History Of Coffee: Where Did Coffee Originate And How Was It Discovered?History Of Coffee: Where Did Coffee Originate And How Was It Discovered?

Contents show

The history of coffee is a fascinating story. The bean has traveled the globe for centuries, being smuggled out of strict countries, stolen from royalty and has changed entire nations and economies. It’s remarkable how one small bean taken from tiny trees in Ethiopia could become the 2nd largest commodity traded in the world today.

Ever wondered where coffee came from, were this little bean got its start? Get ready to be taken on a journey through time and across continents.

Where Did Coffee Originate?

Where did coffee originate? Well, that’s the easy bit. At the very beginning, it came from Ethiopia. But how the bean made it to every corner of the globe? That’s what we are going to dig into.

After a slow discovery in Africa, coffee went west into Europe to be discovered and coveted by the newer civilizations as well as east into Asia where it was planted and harvested.

There’s a lot to cover, so grab a cup of coffee and read on.

How Was Coffee Discovered? – Ethiopia And The Dancing Goats

an illustration of kaldi and dancing goats

The most popular origin story of the beloved bean starts with Kaldi and his goats (1) in 700 AD. Kaldi, an Ethiopian (formerly Abyssinia) goat herder stumbled on his goats acting quite strange.

They were dancing. This definitely wasn’t normal. He discovered that they were eating red berries and concluded that this fruit was the cause of this odd behavior.

After stumbling upon this magic fruit, he shared his findings with a monk, who was ecstatic to find something that would help him stay awake all night as he prayed.

happy monk after eating the coffee berries

Another story, however, claims that Kaldi shared these beans with a monk who disapproved of their use and threw them into the fire.

The result was a wonderful, pleasing aroma which became the world’s first roasted coffee. Shortly after this, the beans were ground and boiled to produce what we know today as coffee.

Across The Waters – Onto The Middle East

Though the story of Kaldi cannot be proven to be true, one thing is certain: coffee came from Ethiopia.

an illustration of ethiopia’s geographical location in africa

Another thing we know for sure is where it went next. Coffee made its way north, across the red sea into Yemen in the 15th Century.

in the early history of coffee – how coffee made it to Yemen

The port at which the beans first arrived was called Mocha.

Due to coffee’s growing popularity and the shipment of coffee from the port city, Mocha became synonymous with coffee.

So any time you hear the term “mocha,” when talking about coffee, you now know where that term originated.

a sailor almost docking in the port of Mocha

Coffee was grown in Yemen and became well known in Egypt, Persia and Turkey.

It was known as the “wine of Araby.” The beverage started to become a little too popular as coffee houses started to open up all around Arabia. These coffee houses were known as “Schools of the Wise” (2).

These were the places you went to share and hear information. They became the epicenter of social activity.

a woman serving coffee in an Arabian coffee house

However, in the early 1500’s, the court at Mecca declared coffee to be forbidden due to its stimulating effect. A similar thing happened in both Cairo, Egypt and in Ethiopia.

All of these bans were eventually lifted, but coffee faced it’s fair share of persecution before that.

Riots broke out in the Arab streets until justice was returned to the coffee drinking people.

Into Europe And Asia

The course of history changes when the coffee bean spreads both east and west: East into India and Indonesia and West into Italy and onto the rest of Europe.

Asia’s Place In Coffee History

the history of coffee in asia began in the 17th century when a man rode a camel with sacks of coffee beans going to India

Arabia was the gatekeeper for coffee.

If a country wanted coffee beans, they purchased it from Yemen. The authorities liked it that way and did everything to ensure that nobody could take fertile beans out of their control and plant the trees themselves.

Alas, along comes Baba Budan, a Sufi saint from India who was on a pilgrimage to Mecca in 1670.

Upon his return, Baba Budan smuggled some fertile beans back to India where he began coffee cultivation.

a map showing how coffee made it from yemen to india

These beans began a large scale coffee farming in Southern India which are still producing plants today.

In the late 1600’s, the Dutch finally started growing coffee.

Decades earlier, the Dutch had smuggled coffee plants from Yemen in an attempt to grow the beans in Holland, but due to the cold weather their cultivation scheme failed miserably.

dutch men failing to grow coffee trees due to cold weather

This time however, friends in Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) sent coffee seedlings to the Dutch Governor of Java, Indonesia.

While multiple natural disasters wiped out their first attempts at coffee cultivation, in 1704 more seedlings were planted and coffee from Indonesia became a staple.

Java becomes another household term for coffee.

Eventually the coffee plant made its way to both Sumatra and Celebes, drastically increasing Indonesia’s coffee-growing capacity.

Into The West – Coffee Invades Europe

how coffee made it from yemen to rome

Coffee finally arrived in Venice in 1570 and quickly became quite popular. In 1615, Pope Clement VIII decided that the drink must be satanic.

Upon inspection, however, he gave in to the glory of the beverage, baptized it and declared it a Christian beverage.

Pope Clement VIII holding a coffee ceremony, baptizing beans

As the 1600’s rolled on, coffee houses sprung up all over Europe in England, Austria, France, Germany and Holland.

Much like the coffee houses of Arabia, these places became social hubs where one could engage in stimulating conversation and political debates. In England, these became known as penny universities.

For the price of a cup of coffee you could learn all sorts of things as public conversations carried on. Many of these coffee houses even grew into businesses, such as Edward Lloyd’s Coffee House which became a large scale insurance company.

In Oxford, England’s first coffee club opened. This shop would later be known as the Oxford Coffee Club where ideas and innovation were born and shared. The Oxford Coffee Club eventually grew to become The Royal Society (3).

Coffee houses became the go-to place for English men.If they weren’t working or at the pub, they were at the coffee houses. Women at the time were furious as their husbands were never home anymore, always drinking coffee and engaging in religious and political discussions.

17th century English men drinking coffee

In 1674, the Women’s Petition Against Coffee was born in an attempt to ban coffee and bring their men back home.

France was introduced to coffee in the 17th century – specifically in 1669 – by the Turkish Ambassador to Paris. In his time with Louis the XIV, the Royal Court swooned over the beverage and Paris was soon overtaken by the beverage.

In 1683, after the Battle of Vienna, Austria’s first coffee house opened – The Blue Bottle.

The Turks, who were attempting to invade the land, were shut down and left behind a surplus of coffee. The victorious officer opened the shop and popularized the practice of adding milk and sugar to coffee.

Coffee Introduced To The Americas

Coffee’s final frontier: the Americas.

Having already conquered Africa and the Indian Ocean nations and sweeping over Europe, the little beans were about to make their way even further west to conquer every nation touching the Atlantic Ocean.

Crossing The Atlantic

In the early 18th century, the Dutch decided to extend their generosity in a way that would change the [coffee farming] world forever.

The Mayor of Amsterdam gifted King Louis XIV of France a young coffee plant (4) in 1714, although the Dutch could not cultivate coffee trees in Holland, they could keep them alive in special greenhouses. This plant was protected in the Royal Botanical Gardens of Paris.

French Navy Gabriel Mathieu de Clieu getting coffee tree clippings

A captain of the French Navy, Gabriel Mathieu de Clieu was stationed in Martinique but happened to be visiting Paris. It’s unclear whether he ended up stealing clippings from King Louie’s [secured] coffee tree or if King Louie himself gave order for de Clieu to establish a coffee plantation in Martinique.

Regardless, de Clieu took his clippings and set sail for the Caribbean, which happened to have the ideal coffee growing conditions.

How coffee made it to the caribbean?

It was a long journey and de Clieu struggled to keep his plant alive.

Water was scarce on the boat but he managed to keep the plant alive by giving it his own supply of water and often going thirsty himself.

Upon arriving on the island, he secretly planted it among other plants to keep it safe.

Within 3 years coffee plantations spread throughout Martinique, St. Dominique and Guadalupe. These would be the plants that would eventually populate the rest of the Caribbean and Central and South America.

In 1730, the English Governor of Jamaica, Sir Nicholas Lawes brought plants of coffee to his island. Within a short time, coffee was growing deep into the Blue Mountains, an exceptional growing area for coffee.

Brazil And A Modern Coffee Empire

Brazil grows more coffee today than any other country in the world.

So how did it all get started?

With a Brazilian colonel by the name of Francisco de Melo Palheta. Francisco was sent to Guyana to settle a dispute between the Dutch and the French in 1727. His priority, however, was to get coffee and bring it back to Brazil, whatever the cost.

French Governor refusing to give the Brazilian colonel coffee seedlings

The Brazilian colonel requested coffee seedlings from the French Governor.

When his request was refused, his seductive back up plan came into play. He worked his magic on the French Governor’s wife and eventually she managed to secretly give Francisco a handful of clippings.

He took these clippings back to Brazil and started the largest coffee empire on the planet.

Brazilian colonel taking coffee plant clippings to Brazil which led to the boom of coffee plantations in the country

It wasn’t until 1822 that coffee production started to boom in Brazil, and in 1852 the country became the largest producer of coffee and has remained to this day. In 1893, coffee from Brazil was taken to Kenya and Tanzania, close to the birthplace of coffee and cultivated in East Africa.

How America Shaped The Industry Of Coffee

America’s journey with coffee started in the 18th century with the Boston Tea Party and the American Revolution. The year was 1773.

A group of patriots, many dressed as American Indians, snuck aboard English Tea ships sitting in the Boston harbour and dumped all of the tea into the ocean to rebel against the English tax on tea!

Americans dumping tea into the ocean

Thus, tea became extremely unpatriotic and coffee replaced it as the American beverage of choice.

Ever since then, the United States has been the leading importer of coffee (5) and continues to buy far more coffee than any other country.

This countrywide dependency on the beans has been an economic stimulus to many countries throughout South and Central America.

Not only does America import coffee, but it actually grows a little bit of it as well.

Hawaii (not part of America until 1959) was introduced to coffee in 1817 when coffee seedlings were brought by the Brazilians. In 1825, the first official coffee orchard was born, starting Kona’s legacy in the industry.

The Coffee Industry As We Know It TODAY

By the 19th century, coffee was a global phenomenon. It was being shipped and consumed everywhere.

While the bean itself had little land left to conquer, innovations in coffee roasting, packaging and brewing have changed the beverage dramatically in the last 200 years.

High Tech Coffee

The first coffee brewing device born out of the industrial revolution was the percolator.

the first coffee brewing device was a percolator

In 1818 a Parisian metalsmith invented the device which is still used today. Little advancements have been made to improve the device’s original functionality. This percolator made its way to the States in 1865 when James H. Nason patented the first American made percolator.

In 1864 we find the first “modern” coffee roaster.

Jabez Burns of New York invented the first roaster that didn’t need to be held over a fire. He was issued a patent on the machine and became the grandfather of all modern coffee roasting machines.

Though some may consider mass coffee production a downfall in our history, it was a massive achievement at the time.

In 1871, John Arbuckle invented a machine that filled, weighed, sealed and labeled coffee in paper packages. Arbuckles became the largest importer of coffee in the world and even owned the most merchant ships in the world, constantly shipping coffee from South America back to the States.

Then, in 1886, Maxwell House found its start.

Joel Cheek named his coffee blend after the fancy Maxwell House Hotel, famed for the seven different presidents who have stayed there. In 1942, in the middle of World War II, Maxwell House instant coffee became a staple for both soldiers and civilians alike.

The first espresso machine was created in 1901 in Italy by Luigi Bezzera.

It was the first commercial espresso machine that used water and steam under high pressure to brew coffee really fast.

The machine was designed out of necessity as Luigi was just hoping to reduce the time it took to make coffee so his employees could get back to work faster.

In 1905, however, modern coffee knowledge overtook Luigi’s attempts at espresso.

Desiderio Pavoni purchased the patent for Luigi’s original espresso machine, determined to make it better. The coffee produced by the original machine was extremely bitter.

Desiderio concluded that the bitterness resulted from the steam and the high temperatures. He decided the temperature should not exceed 195 degrees and would be exposed to 9 BAR pressure.

40 years later, Achille Gaggia, an Italian, took the espresso machine another step forward by using a piston to extract the coffee at an even higher pressure.

a drawing of an early Gaggia piston espresso machine

This new advancement produced a layer of crema atop each shot of espresso and the cappuccino was finally came about.

In 1908, drip coffee took a leap forward.

A German housewife by the name of Melitta Bentz created the first paper coffee filter using her son’s school papers. A patent was issued and her company was born.

In the 1900’s, Nestle was approached by the Brazilian government to find a way to utilize all of Brazil’s coffee waste, as they simply produced too much of it. After years of research, the process of freeze drying coffee to make an instant cup of coffee came about.

The coffee produced is Nescafe and is the world’s leading brand today.

In the 1920’s, the US Government enacted Prohibition. No more alcohol! Coffee sales rose through the roof during this time. Then, in 1926, the Science Newsletter declared coffee to be beneficial.

Not only will it give you a boost, but it’s also healthy!

The Second Wave Of Coffee

During the 1960’s coffee went through another revolution. Alfred Peet was a Dutch-American whose father roasted coffee in Holland. Alfred decided to bring his family’s craft to California and in 1966, Peet’s Coffee opened in Berkeley.

Enter the early stage of specialty coffee.

In 1971 Peet shared his coffee knowledge and roasting techniques with a couple of friends.

These friends joined his staff over the Christmas season to learn the ropes off the business in order to open their own stores. With Peet’s permission, they opened a coffee shop in Seattle using the coffee beans he roasted and mimicking his store layout.

The store was called Starbucks.

a drawing of a starbucks store facade

Within their first year of business, they purchased a coffee roaster and sold their own coffee bean products. They didn’t even sell brewed coffee at the time.

You could only get beans at Starbucks in the early 70’s.

In 1982, Howard Schultz, a salesman who had been selling drip coffee makers, joined the Starbucks team as their Director of Marketing. He was extremely inspired by his trip to Milan, Italy experiencing coffee houses on every street corner.

These cafes served espresso and were a local meeting place for society.

Upon his return, Howard tried to convince the owners to serve actual beverages, but they wouldn’t have it. They simply wanted to focus on roasting and selling quality beans.

In 1984, Starbucks purchased Peet’s, acquiring their original mentors business. The next year, Howard Schultz quit Starbucks to start his own coffee company, Il Giornale, focusing on serving quality coffee drinks.

After immediate success, Schultz purchased Starbucks in 1987 for $3.8 million. He was able to combine the roasting techniques of Starbucks with the Italian concept of the cafe.

Starbucks then went on a rampage, opening thousands of stores with a goal of putting stores in every country.

Whether or not you like Starbucks is irrelevant.

They started something that we can all be grateful for. They led the second wave of coffee in the United States and ultimately the world.

They brought consumers back to the notion that fresh roasted, fresh ground coffee was better than pre ground tins purchased in grocery stores. Starbucks created the modern cafe experience combining freshly roasted beans for sale with the service of brewed coffee and local gathering hubs.

Howard and his team started a fire that not even the behemoth of Starbucks could put out if they tried.

The coffee-brewing industry continues to grow today. Coffee shops are opening everywhere, all the time (6). The latest trend is returning to quality micro roasted coffee beans over mass produced coffee.

an illustration of what’s inside an italian coffee shop

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Single cup, pour over coffee over endless refills from the burned coffee pot.

All around the world people are expecting better coffee. Many companies today are seeking to improve the livelihood of coffee farmers as most coffee producing countries are still widely underdeveloped.

There is still much more room for improvement in the world of coffee, so our story isn’t over yet.

The Coffee Legacy

a map of coffee history around the world

So how big had coffee grown throughout its pilgrimage throughout the world?

Today, coffee is the second largest commodity traded on a global scale!

Only oil exceeds the amount of coffee that is traded in the world today. 400 billion cups of coffee are consumed every year. It’s very likely that coffee consumption will continue for a long, long time.

a graph of the most traded commodities in the world – coffee ranking second after oil

Coffee has quite literally changed the world.

From ancient monks and goat herders chewing the coffee berries and brewing unroasted coffee, to barista competitions and perfectly poured hearts in our lattes, we all play a part in the history of coffee.

Where will coffee be in 100 years?

Well, I can’t imagine it gets much better than it is today, but I’m sure that spunky little bean will find another way to shake things up.