The History Of Coffee
Around The World
Beer may be the oldest
man-made brew, with wine
a distant second. Beer
recipes are at least as
old as six-thousand BC,
but the oldest
winemaking processes
date 'only' from about
the turn of the first
millennium.
Their younger cousin, coffee, arose a few hundred years later, though no one
knows how old the coffee plant actually is. Some archaeological evidence
shows that humans were eating the berries on coffee trees as long ago as a
hundred-thousand years.
One
arguable coffee fact claims that a goat herder in Ethiopia observed his charges
eating the red berries from a nearby tree and became excited. Trying them
himself, he too felt a great lift. By six hundred AD that magical berry, and
the brew made from drying and grinding its seeds, had found its way to what
is now Yemen, on the southern tip of the Arabian peninsula.
Stories tell of a native of India smuggling the precious seeds of the tree
out of Arabia around 1650 AD, then planting them in the hills of Chikmagalur.
Arabian law forbad the exporting of beans that could germinate, effectively
controlling coffee trade for centuries. Whether myth or history, the fruit
of those seeds now forms a third of India's large coffee output.
Europeans - the British, Dutch, French, and others - spread the coffee beans
to other countries during their travels. The Dutch were responsible for its
introduction to Java in the 18th century. From those plantings, history
tells us, came the famed tree coveted by France's king, presented to him as
a gift.
Louis XIV of France, finding that the coffee tree didn't tolerate frost
well, had a greenhouse erected to supply him with the coffee beans to make
the brew he so savored. It is said that from that source came the cultivars
used in Central and South America.
Reaching Martinique around 1720, sprouts were planted and grew well in the
hot Caribbean clime. From the thousands of coffee trees that resulted, some
were transported to Mexico where the product now forms one of their largest
exports.
The
history of coffee then made it’s way to French Guiana around the same time,
the coffee tree grew well in that steamy atmosphere there. Seeing an
opportunity, a rascal named Francisco de Melo Palheta solicited the aid of
the governor's wife to smuggle coffee seeds out of the country. As he
prepared to part for Brazil, the lady handed him a bouquet of flowers
containing the illicit coffee beans.
Brazil is now one of the largest coffee producers on the planet.
The
history of coffee then returns to Brazil and the circle is complete, making
their way in the late 19th century to Kenya and Tanzania, not far from their
original home in Ethiopia. Six centuries to return home is a long journey
and an excellent excuse to rest and have a cup of coffee.