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Coffee is a popular beverage prepared from the roasted seeds of the coffee
plant. It is served hot or with ice.
The seeds of the plant are almost always called coffee beans. Coffee is the
second most commonly traded commodity in the world, trailing only petroleum, as
a source of foreign exchange to developing countries. Coffee, along with tea and
water, is one of the most ingested beverages.
History of coffee
Coffee has its history back as far as the 9th century. It was said to
originate from Ethiopia and spread to the rest of the world via Egypt and
Europe. Over the ages, coffee has met both resistance and acceptance by many.
The word Coffee is derived from the Arabic word Qah'wa over Ottoman Turkish
Kahve, which originally meant wine or other intoxicating liquors. Partly due to
the Islamic prohibition on drinking wine, preparing and drinking coffee became
an important social ritual. In 1511 it was condemned at Mecca by a theological
court. In Egypt coffeehouses and warehouses containing coffee berries were
sacked. In 1524 this decision was reversed by an order of Selim I. From the
Muslim world, coffee spread to Europe, where it became the rage in the 17th
century. English coffeehouses were centers of intellectual and commercial
activity. Lloyds of London, the famous insurance firm, was originally a
coffeehouse.
Coffee bean types - Coffee varietals
Coffea arabica—Brazil There are two main species of the
coffee plant, Coffea arabica being the older one. Thought to be indigenous to
Ethiopia, arabica was first cultivated on the Arabian Peninsula. It is
considered by most to taste better than the second species, Coffea
canephora (robusta). Robusta, which contains about 40-50% more
caffeine, can be cultivated in environments where arabica will not thrive. This
has led to its use as an inexpensive substitute for arabica in many commercial
coffee blends. Compared to arabica, robusta tends to be bitter and has little
flavor, with a telltale "burnt rubber" or "wet cardboard" aroma and flavor. Good
quality robustas are used as ingredients in some espresso blends to provide a
better "crema" (foamy head), and to lower the ingredient cost. In Italy many
espresso blends are based on dark-roasted robusta. The large industrial roasters
use a steam treatment process to remove undesirable flavors from robusta beans
for use in mass-marketed coffee blends. Arabica coffees were traditionally named
by the port they were exported from, the two oldest being Mocha, from Yemen, and
Java, from Indonesia. The modern coffee trade is much more specific about
origin, labeling coffees by country, region, and sometimes even the producing
estate. Coffee beans from two different places, or coffee varietals, usually
have distinctive characteristics such as flavor (flavor criteria includes terms
such as "citrus-like" or "earthy"), caffeine content, body or mouthfeel, and
acidity. These are dependent on the local environment where the coffee plants
are grown, their method of process, and the genetic subspecies or varietal.
"Caracoli," also known as peaberry, is a coffee bean which develops singly
inside the coffee cherry, which normally contains two. The Caracoli beans occur
in all regions of the world, on all types of coffee bush. Since flavour is
concentrated when only a single bean is grown inside the cherry, Caracoli beans
(especially Arabica) are highly prized.
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