Showing posts with label coffee plantation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coffee plantation. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Coffee Shops

But have you ever wondered when the first coffee shop started? For most harried career individuals, a visit to their coffee shops for a nightcap with friends and business associates is their idea of a relaxing evening.

It quickly grew in popularity, and by 1675, three thousand coffeehouses were born in England. Boston welcomed its own version of this haven for coffee lovers in 1670, while Paris opened the doors of its first-ever coffee shop in 1671. The first coffee shop opened in Istanbul, Turkey, in 1554, while the first coffeehouse opened in Cornhill, London, in 1652.

Its success was akin to that of tobacco in seventeenth-century Europe. The first coffee plantation in modern times was started in Brazil, in 1727, using slave laborers from Africa. A more credible version asserts that the first coffee shop opened in Krakow, in the sixteenth or seventeenth century, owing to its close trade ties with the Turks. The coffeehouse was started using supplies left behind by the losing Turks. As the legend goes, the first coffeehouse was believed to have opened in Vienna in 1683, after the Battle of Vienna.

For the French, Spanish, and German people, a café is a place where a wide variety of beverages are served, ranging from different types of coffee, tea, and alcoholic beverages. In the Netherlands, the term coffee shop is used to refer to places where marijuana is sold, since one needs fewer permits to open a coffee shop. The Dutch people associate the word with bars and thus relate it more to alcohol. The term "Café" is synonymous with a place where coffee and meals are served together.

Visit your favorite coffee shop and take your pick from among these wonderful concoctions, sure to warm your hearts and lift your spirits. What are you waiting for? In addition to those blended commercially, a lot of coffeehouses have their own signature house blends.

Monday, September 1, 2008

the columbian coffee bean

Nowadays there simply is no better place on earth to plant and grow coffee than the coffee beans harvested in the country of Columbia. Although coffee's birthplace of origin is officially Africa other countries have tried and succeeded to make better coffee. As Starbuck's grew they decided it was to their advantage to purchase the entire coffee plantations and grow their own coffee rather than purchase their coffee through a middle-man supplier. Today the trade of the Columbian coffee bean between these to continents exceeds more than 11 million bags per with the popular Starbuck's franchise being one of its major clients. First started in the early 1,800's, Columbian coffee soon found it's way into the cups of citizens of the United States and Europe. Large metropolitan areas of Medellin, Armenia and Columbia's capital of Bogota are close by and provide the needed labor to work these plantations. The central and eastern regions of Columbia are where most of the coffee plantations reside. The trees grow in the mountains under the shade of the banana and rubber trees and get just the right amount of soil nutrients and sunshine. The Coffea Arabic Tree produces the delicious Columbian coffee bean. The Coffea Arabic Tree takes about four to five years to reach the right maturity level to produce high quality Columbian coffee beans. In the fields farmers practice the dry process to produce their finished coffee product. Once the coffee bean is harvested it is soaked in cold water for twenty-four hours, very similar to the time used to ferment wine. Not until the coffee beans are carefully packaged for shipment all over the world to your favorite coffee shop or supermarket for you to purchase and enjoy. Of course not all coffee beans are created equal and some do not pass the rigorous standards put in place by coffee plantation farmers.

Nowadays there simply is no better place on earth to plant and grow coffee than the coffee beans harvested in the country of Columbia. Although coffee's birthplace of origin is officially Africa other countries have tried and succeeded to make better coffee.As Starbuck's grew they decided it was to their advantage to purchase the entire coffee plantations and grow their own coffee rather than purchase their coffee through a middle-man supplier. Today the trade of the Columbian coffee bean between these to continents exceeds more than 11 million bags per with the popular Starbuck's franchise being one of its major clients. First started in the early 1,800's, Columbian coffee soon found it's way into the cups of citizens of the United States and Europe.Large metropolitan areas of Medellin, Armenia and Columbia's capital of Bogota are close by and provide the needed labor to work these plantations. The central and eastern regions of Columbia are where most of the coffee plantations reside. The trees grow in the mountains under the shade of the banana and rubber trees and get just the right amount of soil nutrients and sunshine. The Coffea Arabic Tree produces the delicious Columbian coffee bean.Of course not all coffee beans are carefully packaged for shipment all over the world to your favorite coffee shop or supermarket for you to purchase and enjoy.

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