According to our guest writer,
Richard Woods, most of the world begins the day with a fresh cup of coffee.
What has become the most popular beverage today was literally unheard of
several centuries ago. If it hadn’t been
for a shepherd in Ethiopia, we may not know about coffee at all. The history of
coffee is definitely an interesting one, with multiple stories weaving
throughout history, right up until present day.
Take this version of the story of Kaldi cum grano.
According to legend, coffee was
discovered in Ethiopia by a shepherd by the name of Kaldi. Although history has been unable to verify the
story, there has been some evidence of truth in certain elements of the story. It is believed that Kaldi discovered coffee
when he realized that his sheep remained active and spirited throughout the
night if they consumed berries from a certain tree. He explained this to the abbot, who believed
Kaldi and made a drink from the berries based on his observation. To his amazement, the abbot also found it hard
to sleep after saying his prayers. The next day, he shared his experience with
the other monks and soon the tales of the drink that kept you awake spread
across the country. Soon after, coffee
began its journey to the rest of the world.
The Arabs are known to be first
people to trade with coffee. They began to grow and cultivate the berries and
by the fifteenth and sixteenth century, coffee was being cultivated for
commercial trade in Yemen, Persia, Syria, Turkey and Egypt.
Coffee started to be consumed in
homes and public places alike, as it was not an alcoholic drink – forbidden in
many Eastern Countries. It became a drink of choice at social gatherings and
soon the wine of Araby as it was called, began to spread beyond Arabia.
Coffee began its slow journey to
Europe in the seventeenth century when it was brought back by European
travelers from Arabia. Contrary to the welcome that coffee received in Arabia
when it first made its appearance, it was widely condemned in Europe. In 1615,
the clergy of Venice condemned the consumption of the beverage strongly and
created a controversy that required the intervention of Pope Clement III. The
Pope drank the controversial beverage and gave his approval to coffee almost instantly.
Soon after, coffee spread to the
rest of Europe with many coffee houses springing up across major cities in
England, France, Germany, Austria and the Netherlands. It was easily available
and people found themselves engaging in conservations over a cup of
coffee. Coffee reached the America’s or the ‘New World’ during the 1600′s
and became popular a century later as a result of the high taxes imposed on tea
by the ruling government.
Although the Arabs closely
guarded coffee to protect their monopoly on the beverage, the Dutch managed to
obtain a few seeds in late seventeenth century. From the Ethiopian highlands,
coffee is now grown in almost all parts of the world.
So next time you take a sip of
the dark rejuvenating hot drink, think of the journey it made through time and
geography to find a place, right there in your cup.
The
purpose of this blog is to unite Kona coffee lovers and perhaps learn a little
about coffee and all the benefits of coffee at the same time. Join up, become a member, comment and have
fun! You can find the Kona Coffee Fiends
group on Facebook and we’d appreciate it if Facebook users would “LIKE” the
Kona Cowboy Coffee Company page at www.facebook.com/pages/Kona-Cowboy-Coffee-Company/222070817858553. Just copy and paste to your browser. You can also find us on Twitter at http://twitter.com/#!/jackshuster. And on the web at www.KonaCowboyCoffee.com to order your
gourmet coffee and coffee products.
Look
for the Kona Cowboy Coffee Company’s Cowboy Coffee Saloon at the Western
Legends Roundup in Kanab, Utah, August 17-18, along with Dr. Buck’s Wild Bunch,
Cowboy Action Shooting with the North Rim Regulators and lots of movie stars
and heroes.
You know you’re a coffee fiend when you “channel surf” faster without a remote! So enjoy your coffee,
make it Kona, and remember, Kona is the home of the Hawaiian cowboy…and we had
cowboys in Kona before there were cowboys in Texas!
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