| Coffee
Legend
The Early Years
Coffee in Europe
Colony Cultivation
The 20th Century
| Coffee
Legend |
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There are a number of differing stories
as to the origin of coffee and how it
was discovered. One story is that of an
exiled Arab Sheik who saved himself from
starvation by making a soup from the berries
of the coffee shrub. The most common is,
however, that of Kaldi the goatherd or
shepherd who, in around 600-800 AD, was
tending to his animals on the mountainside
one night in Eastern Africa, most likely
modern day Ethiopia, when he noticed that
they were acting strangely. On investigating
this he realised that they had been eating
the cherry-red berries of a nearby shrub.
As a result of this they remained awake,
jumping and leaping around the whole night
- even the older goats. Curious, the goat
herder picked some and tasted them himself.
He found that they invigorated him and
made him more wide awake.
It was about this time that a monk called
Chadely or Scyadly from a nearby monastery
was passing. The goatsherd told him about
the goats and he demanded to be shown
this plant. Kaldi showed the monk a pretty
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little shrub with a greyish
bark and brilliant foliage, the slender
branches of which, at the base of their
leaves, had bunches of small white flowers
mingles with clusters of small berries,
some green, riper ones a clear yellow
colour and yet others, which had reached
complete maturity, of the size, shape
and colour of a cherry. It was the coffee
shrub.
The monk, wishing to try the effects
of these berries, crushed a few into a
powder and poured boiling water over them
to make a drink. This was the first cup
of coffee - it was not until much later,
however, that coffee was first roasted.
Impressed with the results of the drink
in making him wider awake and yet not
affecting his intellectual capabilities,
the monk took the new discovery back to
his monastery realising that it would
help him and his fellow monks stay awake
during their long hours of prayer. Coffee
soon spread from monastery to monastery
and, therefore, became in much demand
with devout Moslems, believing it to be
a divine gift brought by an angel from
heaven to the faithful.
And so coffee had been discovered. In
the centuries that followed, the people
of this land absorbed coffee into their
culture and daily routine. It was not,
however, until later that coffee was discovered
by the outside world. |
The Early
Years
There are many legends that portray the origin
of coffee drinking, some of which may be true.
There is no real evidence, however, to show
exactly when, or how, coffee was first discovered.
It appears to have originated in Abyssinia and
certainly has a presence around the Red Sea
area by about 700 AD. History tells us that
other Africans of the same era fuelled up on
protein-rich coffee and animal-fat balls (primitive
energy bars!) and unwound with wine made from
coffee-berry pulp.
The drinking of coffee soon spread to Arabia
most likely by Arab traders and by the end of
the 9th Century a drink known as qahwa (literally
meaning "that which prevents sleep")
was being made by boiling the beans. The drinks
made from coffee soon became known as Arabian
Wine as Muslims, who were forbidden to drink
wine, used coffee with its stimulating powers
as a substitute. It is known to have been drunk
during prayers, in the mosques, even at the
Holy Temple at Mecca and before the tomb of
the Prophet.
It was not until after coffee had been consumed
as a food product, a wine and a medicine that
it was discovered, probably by complete accident,
that by roasting the beans a delicious drink
could be made. This did not happen until sometime
between 1000AD and 1200AD probably in Arabia.
By the end of the 13th century, however, Muslims
were drinking coffee religiously. Wherever Islam
went coffee went to: from India to North Africa
and the Eastern Mediterranean. Coffee was first
cultivated in the Yemen area of Africa between
1250 and 1600 when extensive planting occurred.
The trade in coffee was jealously guarded
by the Arabs who made every effort to prevent
other countries acquiring their fertile
beans. They would not allow coffee beans
to be taken out of the country unless they
had first been dried in sunlight or boiled
in water to kill the seed-germ. In fact,
it is said that no coffee seed sprouted
outside Africa or Arabia until the 1600s.
As a result of this, for many centuries,
the Yemen served as the world's primary
source of coffee.
Some seed beans or plant cuttings were eventually
taken out of Arabia, however, either by
being smuggled or inadvertently taken by
groups of pilgrims on their annual travels
to Mecca.
The first coffee shop that is known to have
opened was Kiv Han in Constantinople (later
Istanbul) in 1475 after being introduced
to Turkey two years early by the Ottoman
Turks. Coffee soon became a part of social |
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| life as coffee shops multiplied
rapidly and within a few years there were
hundreds of them in the city. People visited
these coffee houses to talk, listen to music,
watch dancing, play chess and other games,
listen to the tales of wandering storytellers,
or listen to other learned conversations
and, of course, to drink coffee! Coffee
houses in Turkey became known as the "Schools
of the Wise", because so much could
be learned there. |
In the middle of the 16th Century, coffee
was already drunk in Egypt, Syria, Persia and
Turkey, and coffee shops were to be found in
the cities of Medina, Cairo, Baghdad, Alexandria,
Damas and Istanbul. Around the same time, Soliman
the Magnificent's Turkish warriors introduced
the drink to the inhabitants of the Balkans,
Central Europe, Spain and North Africa.
Attempts to ban coffee during these early years
occurred quite regularly - often to little effect.
In 1511, Khair Beg, the corrupt governor of
Mecca, was executed after attempting to ban
coffee - fearing that it's influence might foster
opposition to his rule. The sultan on hearing
about this declared that coffee is sacred and
ordered the governor's death. Another try at
banning coffee came from The Grand Vizir of
the Ottoman Empire in 1656. He prohibited coffee
and closed the coffee houses of Turkey. The
penalty for drinking it, however, was nothing
too serious - just a dunk in the Bosphorous
in a leather satchel.
| Coffee
in Europe |
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Coffee was hardly known in Europe before
the seventeenth century. European travellers,
who visited Middle Eastern countries at
this time, probably visited the coffee houses,
where business would be transacted, or saw
street coffee pedlars carrying coffee for
sale in copper pots.
When these travellers returned, their reports
about coffee aroused European interest in
coffee. Perhaps these travellers brought
back small samples of coffee beans, but
the Venetians were the first people to bring
larger quantities of coffee into Europe.
In 1615, Venice received Europe’s
first shipment of green coffee beans and
the first coffee house there, Caffè
Florian, opened in 1683.
Coffee was known in the first half of the
17th Century in Venice and Marseille but
there was no trade in beans there. Although
famous for their tea drinking, the British
were the |
first European nation to
embrace the pleasures of coffee drinking
on a commercial basis. The first coffeehouse
was in Oxford in 1650 where it was opened
by a Turkish Jew named Jacob. More opened
soon after in London in 1652 where there
were soon to be hundreds - each serving
their own customers.
The Ambassador of the Turkish Ottoman Empire
to the court of Louis XIV in Paris brought
coffee into fashion in Parisian High Society
around 1669. As laid down by Turkish custom,
he offered it to all who came to visit him
and persuaded the Sun King to give the drink
a try. The King, however, decided he preferred
hot chocolate! The first cafe selling coffee
was opened in Paris in 1686. Francesco Procopio
de Coltelli of Sicily is credited with starting
Le Procope - an establishmenth that's still
in business today. It has been the hangout
of suc luminaries as Voltaire, Diderot and
Robespierre.
Coffee reached Vienna in 1683, just after
the city had been besieged in war with the
Turks. The coffee was retained by a Polish
Army Officer, Franz Georg Kolschitzky. He
had previously lived in Turkey and, being
the only person there who knew how to use
it, claimed the stocks of coffee left by
the fleeing Turkish army for himself. He
later opened central Europe's first coffee
house in Vienna and was reported to be quite
rich as a result of this venture. He also
established the habit of refining the brew
by filtering out the grounds, sweetening
it, and adding a dash of milk hence inventing
Viennese coffee and also the pastries served
with it.
The popularity spread through Europe to
such an extent that, during the 17th and
18th centuries, there were more coffee shops
in London than there are today. Coffee shops
were nothing like the trendy shops that
we have today. A true coffeehouse was crowded,
smelly, noisy, feisty, smoky, celebrated
and condemned. On the street in London you
located the nearby coffeehouse by sniffing
the air for roasting beans, or by looking
for a wooden sign shaped to resemble a Turkish
coffee pot.
It was the coffeehouses of England that
started the custom of tipping waiters and
waitresses. People who wanted good service
and better seating would put some money
in a tin labelled "To Insure Prompt
Service" - hence "TIPS".
Coffee shops then were influential places,
used extensively by artists, intellectuals,
merchants, bankers and a forum for political
activities and developments. When they became
popular in England, the coffee houses were
dubbed "penny universities". It
was said that in a coffee house a man could
"pick up more useful knowledge than
by applying himself to his books for a whole
month". A penny was the price of a
coffee.
If it were not for the cafes in Paris and
the fact that they attracted revolutionaries
then the French could still have a monarchy!
In Paris, one cafe had a separate room reserved
for fighting duels; another hosted the premiere
of the world's first motion picture.
It is no surprise, therefore, that such
a popular institution had opponents everywhere.
In Italy, around 1600, priests asked Pope
Clement VIII to forbid the favourite drink
of the Ottoman Empire considering it part
of the Infidel threat. On taking one sip,
the pope found the drink delicious and baptised
it - making it an acceptable Christian beverage.
In 1674 The Women's Petition Against Coffee,
was set up in London. Women complained that
men were never to be found at home during
times of domestic crises, since they were
always enjoying themselves in the coffee
houses. They circulated a petition protesting
"the grand inconveniences accruing
to their sex from the excessive use of the
drying and enfeebling liquor". A year
later, King Charles II tries to supress
the coffee houses because they were regarded
as hotbeds of revolution but his proclamation
is revoked after a huge public outcry and
the ban lasts just 11 days.
Some of the coffee houses in London became
very well known with different groups of
workers and soon became the kingpins around
which the capital's social, political and
commercial life revolved. Jonathan's Coffee
House in Change Alley was where stockbrokers
usually met - it eventually became the London
Stock Exchange. Likewise, ship owners and
marine insurance brokers visited Edward
Lloyd's Coffee House in Lombard Street -
it too moved on and up in the world and
became the centre of world insurance and
the headquarters of Lloyds of London.
Johann Sebastian Bach composed his "Kafee-Kantate"
or Coffee Cantata in 1732. Partly an ode
to coffee and partly a stab at the movement
in Germany to prevent women from drinking
coffee (it was thought to make them sterile),
the cantata includes the aria "Ah!
How sweet coffee tastes! Lovelier than a
thousand kisses, sweeter far than muscatel
wine! I must have coffee..."
Prussia's Frederick The Great attempted
to block imports of green coffee in 1775
as Prussia's wealth is drained. He condemned
the increase in coffee consumption as "disgusting"
and urged his subjects to drink beer instead.
He employed coffee smellers, who stalked
the streets sniffing for the outlawed aroma
of home roasting. Public outcry changes
his mind.
Coffee fever spread throughout Europe in
the 18th Century and the French had introduced
coffee into the New World by 1715. Coffee
consumption in Britain began to decline
as import duties for coffee increased. The
British East India Company concentrated
on importing tea as the market began to
grow.
In Europe, however, people were gradually
inventing new and improved ways of making
coffee and, in 1822, a Frenchman Louis Bernard
Rabaut invented a machine which forced the
hot water through the coffee grounds using
steam instead of merely letting it drip
through. The first espresso machine had
been born.
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Colony Cultivation
Coffee is believed to have arrived
in North America in 1607 when Captain John
Smith helped to found the colony of Virginia
at Jamestown. By 1668 coffee had replaced
beer as New York City's favourite breakfast
drink with coffeehouses in New York, Boston,
Baltimore, Philadelphia and elsewhere. Most
of these coffeehouses were more like pubs
and taverns than the genuine coffeehouses
of Europe. They served not only coffee but
also chocolate, ales, beers and wines. They
also rented rooms to sailors and travellers.
One famous coffeehouse in New England was
the Green Dragon in Boston. At first it
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| was popular with British officers
but in later years it came to be the gathering
place of John Adams, Paul Revere and other
revolutionaries plotting against England.
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Tea remained the favourite beverage in America
until 1773 when the people of Boston revolted
against the excessively high tax King George
had placed on tea. They raided English merchant
ships which were in the harbour and threw their
cargoes of tea into the sea. The event became
known as the "Boston Tea Party", and
afterwards the people of Boston and America
changed from drinking tea to coffee which was
seen as a patriotic duty.
It was the Dutch, however, who, with a coffee
plant smuggled out of the Arab port of Mocha,
became the first to transport and cultivate
coffee commercially in 1690. They founded the
East India coffee trade by taking the coffee
tree to Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) and their East
Indian colony, Java, and as a result, Amsterdam
became a trading centre for coffee. Coffee was
becoming a precious product fit for Royal gifts
and, in 1714, the mayor of Amsterdam sent a
young coffee tree to King Louis XIV of France
as a present. These seedlings were entrusted
by the King to the botanists of the King's Royal
Botanical Garden (now the "Jardin des Plantes").
It is the descendents of this plant who ended
up producing the entire Western coffee industry.
A young naval officer, Gabriel Mathieu de Clieu,
was in Paris on leave from Martinique, a French
colony in the Carribean. Imagining Martinique
as a French Java, he requested clippings from
his King's tree. Permission was, however, denied.
Determined, de Clieu led a moonlight raid of
the King's Garden and managed to steal a seedling
from the greenhouses. De Clieu set sail for
Martinique only to discover the worst was still
to come.
On the return journey to Martinique, de Clieu
was to encounter a number of setbacks. A "basely
jealous" passenger attempted to steal his
coffee seedling and, when unable to get the
plant away from him, tore off a branch. The
ship was then attacked and almost captured by
pirates. Getting over that, it suffered a violent
storm and when the skies became clear they became
far too clear and the ship was becalmed. Water
grew scarce but the young coffee tree was kept
alive because de Clieu used part of his own
tiny water ration to water it. On arriving in
the Carribean, de Clieu planted the tree on
his own estate in Martinique where, under armed
guard, it yielded a total of about 18 million
trees by 1777.
The French and the Dutch were, like the Arabs
before them, anxious to protect their monopoly
over cultivation. Brazil's emperor, however,
wanted a cut of the coffee market and, in 1727,
he send Lt. Col. Francisco de Melo Palheta to
French Guiana to mediate a border dispute between
the French and Dutch. Not only did the Colonel
settle the dispute but he also managed to initiate
an affair between him and the governor's wife.
The plan payed off and, as a farewell gift at
a state dinner, she presented him with a sly
token of affection: a bouquet in which she hid
cuttings and the fertile seeds of coffee. It
is from these shoots that the world's greatest
coffee empire and the great coffee plantations
of Latin America emerged. By 1800 Brazil's monster
harvests would turn coffee from a drink for
the elite into an everyday drink for the people.
More recently, the welfare of growing areas
has become of more concern and so there is a
greater degree of control over the turning of
land into coffee plantations and better trading
deals are being negotiated.
The 20th
Century
The twentieth century has seen a number of important
developments in coffee including the development
of both instant and decaffeinated coffees.
Decaffeinated coffee was first invented in 1903
when a German coffee importer, Ludwig Roselius,
turned a batch of ruined coffee beans over to
researchers. Although not the first to remove
caffeine, they perfected the process of removing
caffeine from the beans without destroying any
flavour. He marketed the coffee under the brand
name "Sanka" (a contraction of "sans
caffeine"). Sanka was introduced into the
US in 1923.
The first soluble coffee was invented by a Japanese-American
chemist called Satori Kato who lived in Chicago.
However, the first mass produced instant coffee,
was the invention of George Constant Washington,
an English chemist living in Guatemala. While
waiting for his wife one day to join him in
the garden for coffee, he noticed on the spout
of the silver coffee pot, a fine powder, which
seemed to be the condensation of the coffee
vapours. This intrigued him and led to his discovery
of soluble coffee. In 1906 he started experiments
and put his product, Red E Coffee, on the market
in 1909. In 1938, Nestlé, after being
asked by Brazil to help find a solution to their
coffee surpluses, invented freeze-dried coffee.
Nescafe was developed and first introduced into
Switzerland. Instant coffee really took off
after 1956 when commercial television was introduced.
The commercial breaks were too short a time
in which to brew a cup of tea, but time enough
for an instant coffee. The entrepreneurs of
the coffee world like Nestlé and General
Foods realised this was their big chance and
advertised their instant coffee during the breaks.
In retaliation, the tea companies introduced
the tea bag in a desperate bid to compete.
The government took over the tea trade in Britain
during the Second World War introducing rationing
which continued until 1952. After the war, however,
people didn't start drinking as much tea again
as expected - they drank coffee instead.
The modern-day espresso machine was perfected
by Achilles Gaggia in Italy in 1946. He managed
to use a higher pressure than steam by using
a spring powered lever system. Gaggia brought
his revolutionary espresso machine to London
in the 1950s and opened a mocha bar in Frith
Street in Soho - hence the modern day coffee
bar was born. The first pump driven espresso
was produced in 1960 by Faema.
Because of the economic importance of coffee
exports, a number of Latin American countries
made arrangements before World War 2 (1939-1945)
to allocate export quotas so that each country
would be assured a certain share of the coffee
market. The first coffee quota agreement was
arranged in 1940 and was administered by the
Inter-American Coffee Board. It was not, however,
until 1962 that the idea of establishing coffee
export quotas on a worldwide basis was adopted.
This was set up by the United Nations as the
International Coffee Agreement. During the five-year
period when this agreement was in effect, 41
exporting countries and 25 importing countries
agreed to its terms. The agreement was re-negotiated
in 1968, 1976 and 1983. Participating nations
failed to sign a new pact in 1989 and, as a
result, world coffee prices plunged. There were
a series of crop failures, most notably in Brazil
in the early 1990s which meant that coffee prices
increased dramatically. Only recently have prices
begun to drop again.
coffee machines
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