You either love coffee or you hate it. Some people want tea. However, coffee is the second most traded product in the world. Oil is the first.
Coffee plants can only grow in countries where there is no frost in winter. That’s why coffee is grown close to the equator, between the tropics of Cancer and Capricorn.
Only two varieties of coffee beans are grown – Arabica and Robusta.
Coffee was not always a drink. When it was first discovered in Africa, people grinded coffee cherries, added animal fat, and made balls from the mixture they ate. It could have been the first energy snack in the world.
When decaffeinated coffee, some coffee producers sell caffeine to pharmaceutical companies and soda ash companies. So little is wasted.
We have been making instant coffee for about 250 years, even though it has not been mass-produced as it is now. It was first introduced in the UK in 1771. The first mass-produced instant coffee was patented in the United States in the early 20th century, more precisely in 1910.
Finns are the most prolific coffee drinkers in the world, not Americans, as you might have thought!
There are plans to produce biodiesel with coffee grounds, so coffee could burn your car in the future.
It is possible that if you give your cat liquid coffee every day, it can prolong his life. Why do people think so? Well, according to the Guinness Book of Records, the oldest cat, called Creme Puff, drank coffee every morning. She reportedly liked the broccoli as well. and her breakfast eggs and bacon. She lived to be 38 years old. Its owner also had another cat – his grandfather Rex Allen. It was this cat that previously had the world record for the oldest cat in the world. They followed the same diet. Maybe it was coffee that helped these two cats live that long.
In the seventeenth century, when men often visited cafes, especially in London, women felt it was responsible for turning a man into corpses that were useless to them. These women have filed a petition against coffee proposing that no younger men should drink it. The proposed ban has clearly not entered into force.
In fact, there were other attempts to ban the drink, and in Sweden it was banned in 1746. Not only drinking but also coffee-making equipment, including coffee cups and saucers, and not just pots, were banned. or.
The coffee had a checkered history, but thankfully it was readily available.