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What is Coffee?
Coffee is a kind of drink, usually
hot, prepared from the roasted seeds of the coffee
plant. These seeds are usually called coffee beans.
Coffee is the second most traded commodity in the
world, trailing only petroleum. Coffee is one of
humanity’s chief sources of caffeine, a stimulant.
Its potential benefits and hazards have been, and
continue to be, widely studied and discussed.
The word entered English in 1598 via
Italian caffč, via Turkish kahveh, from Arabic qahwa.
Its ultimate origin is uncertain, there have been
several legendary accounts of the origin of the
drink. One possible origin is the Kaffa region in
Ethiopia, where the plant originated (its native
name there being bunna).
Coffee beans were first exported from
Ethiopia to Yemen. One legendary account (though
certainly a myth) is that of the Yemenite Sufi
mystic named Shaikh ash-Shadhili. When traveling in
Ethiopia he observed goats of unusual vitality and,
upon trying the berries that the goats had been
eaten, experienced the same effect. A similar myth
ascribes the discovery to an Ethiopian goatherd
named Kaldi. Qahwa originally referred to a type of
wine, and need not be the name of the Kaffa
region.Consumption of coffee was outlawed in Mecca
in 1511 and in Cairo in 1532, but in the face of its
immense popularity, the decree was later rescinded.
In 1554, the first coffeehouse
in Istanbul opened. Coffee was introduced in England
in the 1430s by the Greek professor in Oxford
Ioannis Servopoulos. Largely through the efforts of
the British and Dutch East India companies, coffee
became available in Europe in the 16th century, at
the latest from Leonhard Rauwolf’s 1583 account,
with first coffeehouses opening in the mid-17th
century: in London in 1652, in Boston in 1670, and
in Paris in 1671. By 1675, there were more than
3,000 coffeehouses in England.
Legend has it that the first
coffeehouse opened in Vienna in 1683 after the
Battle of Vienna, taking its supplies from the
spoils left behind by the defeated Turks. Another
more credible story is that the first coffeehouses
were opened in Krakow in the 16th or 17th century
because of closer trade ties with the East, most
notably the Turks.
The first coffee plantation in the
New World was established in Brazil in 1727, and
this country, like most others cultivating coffee as
a commercial commodity, relied heavily on slave
labor from Africa for its viability. The success of
coffee in 17th-century Europe was paralleled with
the spread of the habit of tobacco smoking all over
the continent during the course of the Thirty Years
War (1618–48).
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