Know Your Food: Who Wants Coffee?

It’s bitter—but beloved around the world

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It’s bitter—but beloved around the world

Chances are you’ve had a cup of coffee today. Whether as a morning energy boost, an afternoon pick-me-up or part of a social activity, coffee drinking has become a daily habit for billions of people. From Ethiopian buna to whipped Korean dalgona to American nitro cold brew, there are countless ways of preparing and drinking coffee.

Every year, people consume over 10 billion kilograms of this dark, bitter beverage. But where does coffee come from?

We likely discovered the magical properties of the coffee bean—the seeds of Coffea, a genus native to parts of Africa and tropical Asia—centuries ago. As legend has it, around 800 C.E., a young Ethiopian goatherd named Kaldi noticed that his goats wouldn’t sleep at night after munching on the berries of coffee plants. Learning this, local monks began using the berries to make a drink that would keep them awake through long nights of prayer.

Whether this is truly the origin of coffee or simply an enchanting myth is anyone’s guess. What we do know is that coffee beans most likely spread east from Ethiopia toward the Arabian Peninsula. The drink became a part of everyday life in Yemen, Persia and Turkey during the 16th century. Starting in Constantinople (modern-day Istanbul), coffee houses began popping up as places to exchange news, listen to music and play chess. (The word ‘coffee’ likely comes from the Arabic qahwah, which today refers to coffee but then meant wine—earning the drink the nickname ‘wine of Arabia’.)

Coffee reached the western hemisphere in the 18th century, after a French naval officer transported seedlings to Martinique, which later spread to other parts of the Caribbean and South America. Today, Brazi...

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