Coffee History
by Hilda Maria Sigurdardottir
Coffee - THE Drink of
Choice
Did you know coffee is the most consumed beverage in the world.
How did coffee get this ranking? What country first figured out
coffee was safe for consumption? When was
the first drink of coffee prepared? Where did the first
coffee shop come in being?
There are many questions about the starting point of drinking
coffee. It has been so long ago no one really knows all the
facts. But, one thing is for sure, coffee is the most consumed
beverage on the planet.
In the Beginning
It looks as if the first trace came out of Abyssinia and was
also sporadically in the vicinity of the Red Sea around seven
hundred AD. Along with these people, other Africans of the same
period also have a history of using the coffee berry pulp for
more than one occasion like rituals and even for health.
Coffee began to get more attention when the Arabs began
cultivating it in their peninsulas around eleven hundred AD. It
is speculated that trade ships brought the coffee their way.
The Arabs started making a drink that became quite popular
called gahwa--- meaning to prevent sleep. Roasting and boiling
the bean was how they made this drink. It became so popular
among the Arabs that they made it their signature Arabian wine
and it was used a lot during rituals.
After the coffee bean was found to be a great wine and a
medicine, someone discovered in Arabia that you could also make
a different dark, delicious drink out of the beans. This
happened somewhere around twelve hundred AD. After that it
didn’t take long and everyone in Arabia was drinking coffee.
Everywhere these people traveled the coffee went with them. It
made its way around to India, North Africa, the eastern
Mediterranean, and was then cultivated to a great extent in
Yemen around fourteen hundred AD.
Other countries would have gladly welcomed these beans if only
the Arabs had let them. The Arabs killed the seed-germ making
sure no one else could grow the coffee if taken elsewhere.
Heavily guarding their plants, Yemen is where the main source
of coffee stayed for several hundred years. Even with their
efforts, the beans were eventually smuggled out by pilgrims and
travelers.
Coffee Shops Appear
Around 1475 the first coffee shop opens in Constantinople
called Kiv Han two years after coffee was introduced to Turkey,
in 1554 two coffee houses open there. People came pouring in to
socialize, listen to music, play games and of course drink
coffee. Some often called these places in Turkey the “school of
the wise”, because you could learn so much by just visiting the
coffee house and listening to conversations.
In the sixteen hundreds coffee enters Europe through the port
of Venice. The Turkish warriors also brought the drink to
Balkans, Spain, and North Africa. Not too much later the first
coffee house opens in Italy.
There were plenty of people also trying to ban coffee. Such as
Khair Beg a governor of Mecca who was executed and Grand Vizir
of the Ottoman Empire who successfully closed down many coffee
houses in Turkey. Thankfully not everyone thought this way.
Coffee Tips Arrive
In the early sixteen hundreds coffee is presented to the New
World by man named John Smith. Later in that century, the first
coffee house opens in England. Coffee houses or “penny
universities” charged a penny for admission and for a cup of
coffee. The word "TIPS" (for service) has it’s origin from an
English coffee house.
Early in the 17th century, Edward Lloyd's coffee house opens in
England. The Dutch became the first to commercially transport
coffee. The first Parisian café opens in 1713 and King Louis
XIV is presented with a lovely coffee tree. Sugar is first used
as an addition to coffee in his court.
The America’s Have Coffee
Coffee plants were introduced in the Americas for development.
By close to the end of the seventeen hundreds, 1,920 million
plants are grown on the island.
Evidently the eighteen hundreds were spent trying to find
better methods to make coffee.
The “Brew” in the 20th Century
New methods to help brewing coffee start popping up everywhere.
The first commercial espresso machine is developed in Italy.
Melitta Bentz makes a filter using blotting paper. Dr. Ernest
Lily manufactures the first automatic espresso machine. The
Nestle Company invents Nescafe instant coffee. Achilles Gaggia
perfects the espresso machine.
Hills Bros. begins packing roasted coffee in vacuum tins
eventually ending local roasting shops and coffee mills. A
Japanese-American chemist named Satori Kato from Chicago
invents the first soluble “instant” coffee.
German coffee importer Ludwig Roselius turns some ruined coffee
beans over to researchers, who perfected the process of
removing caffeine from the beans without destroying the flavor.
He sells it under the name Sanka. Sanka is introduced in the
United States in 1923.
George Constant Washington an English chemist living in
Guatemala, is interested in a powdery condensation forming on
the spout of his silver coffee flask. After checking into it,
he creates the first mass-produced instant coffee which is his
brand name called Red E Coffee.
Prohibition goes into effect in United States. Coffee sales
suddenly increase.
Brazil asked Nestle to help find a solution to their coffee
surpluses so the Nestle Company comes up with freeze-dried
coffee. Nestle also made Nescafe and introduced it to
Switzerland.
Other Interesting Tidbits
Today the US imports 70 percent of the world’s coffee crop.
During W.W.II, American soldiers were issued instant Maxwell
House coffee in their ration kits.
In Italy, Achilles Gaggia perfects his espresso machine. The
name Cappuccino comes from the resemblance of its color to the
robes of the monks of the Capuchin order.
One week before Woodstock, the Manson family murders coffee
heiress Abigail Folger as she visits with her friend Sharon
Tate in the home of filmmaker Roman Polanski.
Starbuck’s Hits the Coffee World
Starbucks opens its first store in Seattle's Pike Place public
market in 1971. This creates madness over fresh-roasted whole
bean coffee.
Coffee finally becomes the world's most popular beverage. More
than 450 billion cups are sold each year by 1995.
The Current Coffee Trends
Now in the 21st century we have many different styles, grinds,
and flavors of coffee. We have really come a long way even with
our coffee making machines. There’s no sign of coffee
consumption decreasing. Researchers are even finding many
health benefits to drinking coffee. Drink and enjoy!
About the Author
Hilda Maria is the mother of five great children. She
understands the need for a great cup of
coffee in
a flash and enjoys using a
coffee
maker and fresh green
coffee
beans to get it.
grinding coffee
beans
growing coffee beans
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coffee bean picture
coffee bean company
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coffee
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