The aroma from my coffee mug fills
my office, and my tongue is still warm from the first sip. I prefer mine black,
the same as my tea, and until the second pour I don’t really care if I can’t tell the difference.
No one knows who brewed the first
cup of coffee. A charming tale of Kaldi the 9th century Ethiopian
goat herder, who watched his goats dance after eating coffee berries, has been repeated
since Antoine Faustus Nairon told it in a 1671 treatise on coffee, but in all
likelihood coffee is far older than that. Paleo peoples roasted and brewed
pretty much anything edible (and much that proved not to be), and it’s hard to
imagine they would have ignored coffee plants which grew wild in parts of Africa . It is true, however, that Ethiopia is where Yemeni merchants encountered
coffee drinkers in the mid-1400s. They recognized an export opportunity when
they saw one. The traders’ marketing efforts were aided by the ban on alcoholic
beverages in Islamic lands; coffee shops soon cropped up all over the Middle
East and North Africa . By the mid-1500s, the
shops were an elemental part of urban life throughout the Ottoman
Empire .
It was another century before
coffee invaded western Europe in a significant way, but when it did the impact
was profound. We often forget just how boozy a place the West was prior to
coffee. Contaminated water meant vast amounts of beer and wine were consumed
instead. At the Children’s Hospital in Norwich England in 1632,
for example, each child was rationed 2 gallons of beer per week. The first
coffee house in London
was opened in 1652 by Pasqua Rosee, an Armenian in the employ of an English
merchant. Other entrepreneurs followed. In a single decade coffee houses were all
the rage across Europe, taking especial hold in the Netherlands . Unlike mind-addling
alcohol, coffee, according to one anonymous poem from 1674, was
That Grave and Wholesome Liquor
That heals the Stomach, makes the
Genius quicker
Relieves the Memory, revives the
Sad
And Cheers the Spirit, without
making Mad.
Coffee houses became conference centers for European
intellectuals. The abundance of sober meeting places advanced science, promoted
the arts, and launched modern merchant capitalism. Joint stock companies and
brokerages were formed in coffee houses and operated out of them. The Age of
Coffee was the Age of Reason, of empirical science, and of the Enlightenment.
It was no mere coincidence.
Not
everyone in the 17th century welcomed coffee. (When does everyone
approve of anything?) London
tavern owners tried to get coffee houses banned. Charles II worried about
political intrigues in coffee houses and imposed burdensome taxes on coffee.
There was a women’s group that presented The
Women’s Petition Against Coffee, representing to public consideration the grand
inconveniences accruing to their sex from the excessive use of the drying and
enfeebling Liquor. Apparently their men spent so much time in the coffee
houses that they were “as unfruitful as the deserts from where that unhappy
berry is said to be brought.” It was all to no avail. Coffee houses prospered.
Coffee was
a matter of Empire, too. European powers, worried about their dependence on
Middle Eastern sources for this precious resource, strove for coffee
independence. The Dutch smuggled some cuttings out of Africa and planted them
in Batavia (Indonesia ). The French did the same
in the West Indies and the Portuguese were the most successful of all in Brazil .
The lure of
coffee diminished in later years. In the British Empire
in particular it soon found a stiff competitor in tea. Nonetheless, coffee
houses retained cultural significance in much of the world at least through the
much-parodied Beat Era. By the 1970s, few establishments of this type were left.
I’m surprised they haven’t made more of a comeback in recent years in the US , given the
rise in the legal drinking age to 21. (Starbucks
makes a decent cup of coffee, but it really doesn’t count as a classic hang-out.)
In the 17th century, though, coffee houses provided the right
stimulant at the right time. They changed the world.
For now, my
ambitions are more modest. I’ll just pour myself a second mug and let coffee
change my morning.
Coffee House Poetry
from High School Confidential (1958)
Well when Starbucks made it's big appearance in the mid 90s, it certainly was a major hangout. But not by the young and hip, more like the folks trying to recaptures their memories of the whole Beat scene. A Starbucks opened next the video store I worked at. It wasn't too bad, because it made the store smell like coffee (instead of Thai food, which we had previous to that). But there was a group of middle aged men always hanging out in front of the store, drinking coffee, watching all the ladies walk by. I guess I was a bit jealous. I'm working most of the day and these clowns were sitting around for just as long doing nothing. But I never understood why they loved that particular store so much and how they could spend hours sitting in front of it. It had to have been watching all the hot young moms picking up their dry cleaning. :)
ReplyDeleteAnd to answer your burning question, "What is Coffee?" here is a short film with commentary all about it.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YVkusuvTdHw
"When in doubt about motive, assume something creepy" is probably a sound dictum by and large.
DeleteFun film. Even 40 years ago where (sans commentary) would you have aired something like this?