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coffee
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    Do you love your coffee? Can you go a day without a cup of your favourite drink? Coffee as we know it today is much different than when it was first discovered. ......... Read More

  • Decaffeinated-coffee-14
    We're all concerned about our health and for good reason. Consuming too many fatty foods or drinking too much caffeine can cause serious health problems. ......... Read More

  • Grinding Coffee For Coffee Lovers
    If you are a coffee lover, perhaps it is time for you to learn to grind your own coffee. If you don't have the slightest clue of where to start, then this ......... Read More

  • Coffee - From Coffee Beans To Coffee Grinding
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  • How To Making Coffee And Espresso
    How to buy the roasted coffee?After harvest the beans of coffee. The next step is roasting the beans with high temperature about 220-260 Celsius. Grind them to ......... Read More

  • Choosing Coffee Makers For Coffee-loving Couples
    There are more than 2.2 million weddings each year, according to the U.S. Wedding Report. The coffee maker, a must-have appliance in the majority of ......... Read More

  • The What Where And How Of Buying A Coffee Grinder
    Grinding coffee beans in the correct manner is an essential part of creating a good-quality cup of coffee, so buying a coffee grinder is one of the better ......... Read More

  • Coffee Is One Of The Most Popular Drinks In The World
    Coffee is one of the most popular drinks in the world – perhaps because it's so versatile. From simple coffees like espresso and filter coffee, to more complex ......... Read More

  • Types Of Coffee Grinders And How They Work
    When walking down the coffee aisle of most grocery stores, you will find a coffee grinder that customers use to grind coffee beans. A coffee grinder has ......... Read More

  • The Good And Bad Of Coffee
    There have been so many studies over the last twenty-five years about the effects of coffee that many people are confused about the real results.For a few ......... Read More

Nothing perks up a lazy morning like coffee. What is this dark-colored substance
made of and why can't some people survive a day without having even just one sip
of this stimulant?
Coffee, normally taken hot, is made from the coffee plant's roasted seeds,
called coffee beans. Considered the second-most traded commodity in the world,
next to petroleum, it is hailed as modern man's chief source of caffeine for
that extra burst of energy. The perceived benefits and hazards of this potent
drink remain the subject of debate among coffee drinkers worldwide.
How did the word “coffee” come into being? The term “coffee” is known by many
names among various peoples of the world. It came to England in 1598, via the
Italian “caffe.” The Turkish term for it is “kahveh,” while the Arabic word for
it is “qahwa.” Its origin is still unknown, although some believe that the drink
possibly came from the Kaffa region in Ethopia, where the plant originally named
“bunna,” the precursor of coffee, came from.
Did you know that coffee drinking was outlawed in Mecca in 1511, and in Cairo in
1532? Due to coffee's immense popularity, the law was made obsolete soon after.
From then on, owing to the pioneering efforts of the British and Dutch East
India companies, coffee found its way to Europe in the sixteenth century.
One of the two main species of the coffee plant is “Coffea Arabica,” its name
implying that its origin was the Arabian Peninsula, but it is indigenous in
Ethiopia. Although Arabica is more prone to disease, coffee lovers consider it
to be more flavourful than “coffea canephora” (robusta), which holds twice as
much caffeine. However, the later is proven to be a natural insecticide and
stimulant, growing in places where the former cannot grow. Thus, it is used as
an inexpensive substitute for Arabica in commercial coffee blends and in almost
all instant coffee products.
Compared to Arabica, robusta is more bitter, with a burnt-rubber smell and
taste. Robusta of finer quality are used in espresso blends for a foamy effect
and for better affordability. In fact, Italian espresso blends are made from
dark-roasted Robusta.
Some blend varieties are so popular and in demand that they command a higher
price, examples of which are the Jamaican Blue Mountain and the Hawaiian Kona
coffees. Often, these beans are mixed with other, less-expensive varieties and
the term blend is added to the label, such as “Blue Mountain Blend” or “Kona
Blend”.
So beat those morning blues with an adrenaline-pumping sip of this favourite
drink among caffeine addicts worldwide.