Excerpt from UTNE READER, Nov/Dec 94, by Mark Schapiro,
"Muddy Waters"
Prior
to 1000 A.D.: Members of the Galla tribe in Ethiopia
notice that they get an energy boost when they eat a certain
berry, ground up and mixed with animal fat.
1000
A.D.: Arab traders bring coffee back to their
homeland and cultivate the plant for the first time on
plantations. They also began to boil the beans, creating
a drink they call "qahwa" (literally, that which
prevents sleep).
1453:
Coffee is introduced to Constantinople by Ottoman Turks.
The world's first coffee shop, Kiva Han, open there in
1475. Turkish law makes it legal for a woman to divorce
her husband if he fail to provide her with her daily quota
of coffee.
1511:
Khair Beg, the corrupt governor of Mecca, tries to ban
coffee for feat that its influence might foster opposition
to his rule. The sultan sends word that coffee is sacred
and has the governor executed.
1600:
Coffee, introduced to the West by Italian traders, grabs
attention in high places. In Italy, Pope Clement VIII
is urged by his advisers to consider that favorite drink
of the Ottoman Empire part of the infidel threat. However,
he decides to "baptize" it instead, making it
an acceptable Christian beverage.
1607:
Captain John Smith helps to found the colony of Virginia
at Jamestown. It's believed that he introduced coffee
to North America.
1645:
First coffeehouse opens in Italy.
1652:
First coffeehouse opens in England. Coffee houses multiply
and become such popular forums for learned and not so
learned - discussion that they are dubbed "penny
universities" (a penny being the price of a cup of
coffee).
1668:
Coffee replaces beer as New York's City's favorite breakfast
drink.
1668:
Edward Lloyd's coffeehouse opens in England and is frequented
by merchants and maritime insurance agents. Eventually
it becomes Lloyd's of London, the best-known insurance
company in the world.
1672:
First coffeehouse opens in Paris.
1675:
The Turkish Army surrounds Vienna. Franz Georg Kolschitzky,
a Viennese who had lived in Turkey, slips through the
enemy lines to lead relief forces to the city. The fleeing
Turks leave behind sacks of "dry black fodder"
that Kolschitzky recognizes as coffee. He claims it as
his reward and opens central Europe's first coffee house.
He also establishes the habit of refining the brew by
filtering out the grounds, sweetening it, and adding a
dash of milk.
1690:
With a coffee plant smuggled out of the Arab port of Mocha,
the Dutch become the first to transport and cultivate
coffee commercially, in Ceylon and in their East Indian
colony - Java, source of the brew's nickname.
1713:
The Dutch unwittingly provide Louis XIV of France with
a coffee bush whose descendants will produce entire Western
coffee industry when in 1723 French naval officer Gabriel
Mathieu do Clieu steals a seedling and transports it to
Martinique. Within 50 years and official survey records
19 million coffee trees on Martinique. Eventually, 90
percent of the world's coffee spreads from this plant.
1721:
First coffee house opens in Berlin.
1727:
The Brazilian coffee industry gets its start when Lieutenant
colonel Francisco de Melo Palheta is sent by government
to arbitrate a border dispute between the French and the
Dutch colonies in Guiana. Not only does he settle the
dispute, but also strikes up a secret liaison with the
wife of French Guiana's governor. Although France guarded
its New World coffee plantations to prevent cultivation
from spreading, the lady said good-bye to Palheta with
a bouquet in which she hid cuttings and fertile seeds
of coffee.
1732:
Johann Sevastian Bach composes his Kaffee-Kantate. Partly
an ode to coffee and partly a stab at the movement in
Germany to prevent women from drinking coffee (it was
thought to make them sterile), the cantata includes the
aria, "Ah! How sweet coffee taste! Lovelier than
a thousand kisses, sweeter far than muscatel wine! I must
have my coffee."
1773:
The Boston Tea Party makes drinking coffee a patriotic
duty in America.
1775:
Prussia's Frederick the Great tries to block inports of
green coffee, as Prussia's wealth is drained. Public outcry
changes his mind.
1886:
Former wholesale grocer Joel Cheek names his popular coffee
blend "Maxwell House," after the hotel in Nashville,
TN where it's served.
Early
1900's: In Germany, afternoon coffee becomes
a standard occasion. The derogatory term "KaffeeKlatsch"
is coined to describe women's gossip at these affairs.
Since broadened to mean relaxed conversation in general.
1900:
Hills Bros. begins packing roast coffee in vacuum tins,
spelling the end of the ubiquitous local roasting shops
and coffee mills.
1901:
The first soluble "instant" coffee is invented
by Japanese-American chemist Satori Kato of Chicago.
1903:
German coffee importer Ludwig Roselius turn a batch of
ruined coffee beans over to researchers, who perfect the
process of removing caffeine from the beans without destroying
the flavor. He markets it under the brand name "Sanka."
Sanka is introduced to the United States in 1923.
1906:
George Constant Washington, an English chemist living
in Guatemala, notices a powdery condensation forming on
the spout of his silver coffee carafe. After experimentation,
he creates the first mass-produced instant coffee (his
brand is called Red E Coffee).
1907:
In less than a century Brazil accounted for 97% of the
world's harvest.
1920:
Prohibition goes into effect in United States. Coffee
sales boom.
1938:
Having been asked by Brazil to help find a solution to
their coffee surpluses, Nestle company invents freeze-dried
coffee. Nestle develops Nescafe and introduces it in Switzerland.
1940:
The US imports 70 percent of the world coffee crop.
1942:
During W.W.II, American soldiers are issued instant Maxwell
House coffee in their ration kits. Back home, widespread
hoarding leads to coffee rationing.
1946:
In Italy, Achilles Gaggia perfects his espresso machine.
Cappuccino is named for the resemblance of its color to
the robes of the monks of the Capuchin order.
1969:
One week before Woodstock the Manson Family murders coffee
heiress Abigail Folger as she visits with friend Sharon
Tate in the home of filmmaker Roman Polanski.
1971:
Starbucks opens its first store in Seattle's Pike Place
public market, creating a frenzy over fresh-roasted whole
bean coffee.
1979:
Mr Cappuccino opens for business!