The History of Coffee
The History of Coffee
Coffee was discovered in Eastern Africa in an area known as
Ethiopia. A popular legend tells of a goat herder named Kaldi.
One day he noticed his goats acting frisky after eating berries
from a bush. Kaldi tried the berries. He found he had renewed
energy. The news of this amazing fruit spread throughout the
region. Monks started drying the berries to transport to distant
monasteries. They reconstituted the berries by soaking them in
water. They would eat the fruit and drink the liquid to provide
stimulation for a more awakened prayer time. The berries were
transported from Ethiopia to the Arabian peninsula and were
first cultivated in Yemen. Then coffee travelled to Turkey where
beans were roasted for the first time over fires. The beans were
crushed and boiled in water, creating a crude version of the
coffee of today.
Coffee arrived on the European continent through Venetian trade
merchants. The catholics were totally against drinking coffee.
In fact they thought the Pope should ban coffee, calling it the
"Drink of the Devil'. However the pope had already become an
avid coffee drinker. He liked it so much that he blessed it.
Coffee houses spread quickly. Many great minds gathered in them
for thought and creativity. In the 1700's coffee made its way to
the America's by means of a French infantry captain. He
travelled with a small plant. It was then transplanted to the
Carribean Island of Martinique. There grew 19 million trees
within 50 years. Coffee was declared the national drink of the
colonized U.S. by Congress. Today coffee is a giant global
industry employing more than 20 million people. This commodity
ranks second only to Petroleum in its dollars traded worldwide.
There are 4 billion cups consumed every year. Coffee is the
worlds most popular beverage. In Brazil, over 5 million people
are employed in cultivating and harvesting over 3 billion coffee
plants. Sales of premium speciality coffees have skyrocketed.
Sales have reached the multi-billion dollar level and increase
annually. Well that is the history of coffee. It all started
with a farmer wanting more energy. Even today most of the world
wakes up to a cup of coffee to start thier day. I am one of
those people who can't live without coffee, especially in the
morning. Due to it's popularity, I am sure I am not the only
one.