Fast forward 120 years and the local roasting shop and
coffee mill is a commonplace sight in most western cities – that is, until
Hills Bros. begin packing roast coffee in vacuum tins, destroying the roasting
shop industry for all but a few large companies in the process. A year later,
in 1901, instant coffee was created by Japanese-American chemist Satori Kato in
Chicago, and two years after that, a German coffee importer, Ludwig Roselius,
decides to see if a batch of ruined coffee beans can be turned into something
useful by his researchers. They notice the caffeine has been removed by the
water that ruined the beans, and the decaffeinated product is soon marketed as
Sanka.
View 15
Alla
30.11.2012 at 13:20
2 Comments
Ust as with any other delicacy, when you tell
people they can’t have it, they find a way to have it anyway, and so a man by
the name of Baba Budan smuggled the precious beans to the region of Mysore,
India, and began farming coffee. To this day, the offshoots of those original
plants are still farmed in Mysore.
View 15
Alla
30.11.2012 at 13:18
2 Comments
The idea was to keep coffee in Arabia, but it was a theory that worked
better in concept than practice. Just as with any other delicacy, when you tell
people they can’t have it, they find a way to have it anyway, and so a man by
the name of Baba Budan smuggled the precious beans to the region of Mysore,
India, and began farming coffee. To this day, the offshoots of those original
plants are still farmed in Mysore.
View 15
Alla
30.11.2012 at 13:17
0 Comments
In 1511, the governor of Mecca, Khair Beg, tried to ban
coffee because he saw that its influence might encourage the emergence of an
opposition to his government. Beg wasn’t a smart man, because the Sultan of
Arabia considered coffee to be sacred, and duly had the Governor killed. In
Arabia at the time, coffee plants were guarded like we guard nuclear plants
today. The idea was to keep coffee in Arabia, but it was a theory that worked
better in concept than practice. Just as with any other delicacy, when you tell
people they can’t have it, they find a way to have it anyway, and so a man by
the name of Baba Budan smuggled the precious beans to the region of Mysore,
India, and began farming coffee. To this day, the offshoots of those original
plants are still farmed in Mysore.
View 15
Alla
30.11.2012 at 13:12
0 Comments
When the Dutch smuggled a coffee plant smuggled out of
Arabia, they took it to Ceylon and Java, and soon had a near monopoly of their
own. In 1723, the French used the same trick of sneaking a coffee seedling
across the sea and turning it into an industry, when naval officer Gabriel Mathieu
do Clieu stole a plant and shipped it to Martinique. 50 years later, there were
over 19 million coffee trees on the island, and over time, 90% of the world’s
commercial coffee crop would come from this one single plant.
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Alla
30.11.2012 at 13:03
0 Comments
All great things in this world come from a
mistake, it seems. And coffee is no exception. But the history of coffee is one
that is full of twists and turns, some political, some down to happenstance,
but all of them have contributed to your double espresso being what it is
today.
View 15
Alla
30.11.2012 at 12:57
0 Comments
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