The most famous of the stories about the origin of coffee involves
an Abyssinian goatherd named Kaldi who one day noticed that his normally
docile goats had suddenly become exceptionally lively. On closer investigation
Kaldi discovered his goats were nibbling the bright red berries from
a shiny, dark-leafed shrub nearby.
Bravely
the goatherd tasted these berries himself and soon found, to his amazement
that he felt extraordinarily stimulated and invigorated. Convinced that
he had discovered a miracle, Kaldi picked some more of the berries and
rushed off with them to show his local Imam, a learned holy man. The
Imam, on hearing the story, pronounced the beans to be evil and flung
them onto the fire, whereupon a delicious and exotic aroma soon filled
the air. Hastily the Imam, changing his mind, raked the beans from the
fire and threw them into a bowl of water to cool, and then tasted the
water. So was the first recorded coffee "brewed" and enjoyed.
Because of stories like this, coffee was first thought to have originated
in Yemen on the Arabian peninsula when it was seen growing there by
Europeans at a much later date. But the botanical evidence indicates
that the coffee plant "Coffea Arabica" originated on the plateaus of
central Ethiopia where it still grows wild.
Somehow the Arab traders got the beans from Ethiopia across the Red
Sea to Yemen around the 6th century AD. Black African cultures were
using the bean before this, but as a solid food: the ripe berries were
squashed, combined with animal fats and shaped into round balls, which
could be carried and eaten on long journeys.
In Arabia coffee is first mentioned as a medicine, then as a beverage
taken during meditation and religious exercises. But by the 13th century
throughout Arabia Qahveh (Coffee) houses serving the drink had become
very popular, lively places where music was played and politicians,
philosophers, artists and tradesmen all gathered. As coffee drinking
grew in Arabia and Turkey, voyagers and traders from Europe tasted the
new drink and took news of it back to Europe, but the Arabs jealously
guarded their plants and would allow no seeds to leave the country unless
they were roasted to prevent germination. However an Indian Moslem named
Baba Budan on a pilgrimage to Arabia managed to smuggle coffee seeds
out, and on his return home planted them in southern India.
It
wasn't until 1615 that the first shipment of coffee arrived in Europe
at Venice (then European trading headquarters) from Turkey, and coffee
houses quickly spread through Italy and to Vienna, then on to most of
Europe. The first recorded reference to coffee in England was in 1637
when a Turk named Jacob opened a coffee house in Oxford. In the meantime
the Dutch had obtained coffee seeds from Malabar in India and planted
them in their colony at Java. At that time coffee was available from
Mocha the main port of Yemen or from Java, giving rise to the famous
blend of "Mocha-Java."
In 1715 Louis XIV of France was given a single coffee tree brought
from Java to Holland, and then to Paris for him by the Dutch. The first
greenhouse in Europe was then constructed to house the single tree,
where it flowered and bore fruit. (The coffee bush is self-pollinating.)
The first sprouts from this single tree reached Martinique, a French
dominion in the Caribbean around 1720, and the plant spread from there
throughout Central and South America, notably to Brazil which today
supplies over one third of the world's coffee.
In
1893 coffee was introduced to the British colonial countries Kenya and
Tanganyika in Africa, only a few hundred kilometres south of where it
had originated, in Ethiopia.
Coffee is now grown in most parts of the tropical zone, mostly at an
elevation of 800 to 1000 metres, where the plant thrives best. The Robusta
plant though, being hardier, can be grown at lower elevations.
In Australia coffee began to be planted in the early eighties around
Mareeba on the tablelands of northern Queensland, where tea had been
grown for many years. The industry struggled at first, but today some
of the Australian plantations are successfully exporting Arabica beans,
especially to the US and Japan.
We have a delicious Arabica coffee from the Daintree Rainforest region
in Queensland you might like to try.