The birth place
of coffee, Kaffa
Ethiopia, the original home of the coffee plant, coffee
Arabica, which still grows wild in the forest of the
highlands. While nobody is sure exactly how coffee was
originally discovered as a beverage, it is believed that its
cultivation and use began as early as the 9th century. Some
authorities claim that it was cultivated in the Yemen earlier,
around AD 575. The only thing that seems certain is that it
originated in Ethiopia, from where it traveled to the Yemen
about 600 years ago, and from Arabia it began its journey
around the world.
The goatherd or
the goats
Among the many legends that have developed concerning the
origin of coffee, one of the most popular account is that of
Kaldi, an Abyssinian goatherd, who lived around AD 850. One
day he observed his goats behaving in abnormally exuberant
manner, skipping, rearing on their hind legs and bleating
loudly. He noticed they were eating the bright red berries
that grew on the green bushes nearby.
Kaldi tried a
few himself, ad soon felt a novel sense of elation. He filled
his pockets with the berries and ran home to announce his
discovery to his wife. They are heaven-sent, she declared. You
must take them to the Monks in the monastery.
Kaldi presented
the chief Monk with a handful of berries and related his
discovery of their miraculous effect. "Devil's work!"
exclaimed the monk, and hurled the berries in the fire.
Within minutes
the monastery filled with the heavenly aroma of roasting
beans, and the other monks gathered to investigate. The beans
were raked from the fire and crushed to extinguish the embers.
The Monk ordered the grains to be placed in the ewer and
covered with hot water to preserve their goodness. That night
the monks sat up drinking the rich and fragrant brew, and from
that day vowed they would drink it daily to keep them awake
during their long, nocturnal devotions.
While the
legends attempt to condense the discovery of coffee and its
development as a beverage into one story, it is believed that
the monks of Ethiopia, may have chewed on the berries as a
stimulant for centuries before it was brewed as a hot drink.
How it gone to
Arabia?
Another account suggests that coffee was taken to Arabia from
Ethiopia, by Sudanese slaves who chewed the berries en route
to help them survive the journey. There is some evidence that
coffee was ground and mixed with butter, and consumed like
chocolate for sustenance, a method reportedly used by the
Oromo tribe of Ethiopia, which lends some credence to the
story of the Sudanese slaves. The practice of mixing ground
coffee beans with ghee (clarified butter) persists to this day
in some parts of Kaffa and Sidamo, two of the principle coffee
producing regions of Ethiopia,. And in Kaffa, from which its
name derives, the drink is brewed today with the addition of
melted ghee which gives it a distinctive, buttery flavor.
Sheikh Omar
From the beginning, coffee's invigorating powers have
understandably linked it with religion, and each tradition
claims its own story of origins. Islamic legend describes the
discovery of coffee to devout Sheikh Omar, who found the
coffee growing wild while living as a recluse in Mocha, one
famous coffee producing place in Yemen.
He is said to
have boiled some berries, and discovered the stimulating
effect of the resulting brew, which he administered to the
locals who were stricken with a mysterious ailment and thereby
cured them.
There are
numerous versions of this story concerning the Sheikh Omar,
which relate how he cured the King of Mocha's daughter with
coffee, and another where wondrous bird leads him to a tree
full of coffee berries.
Arabic scientific documents dating from around AD 900 refer to
a beverage drunk in Ethiopia, Known as “Bunna", and the
similarities in the words suggests that this could be one of
the earliest references to Ethiopian, coffee in its brewed
form. It is recorded that in 1454 the Mufti of Aden visited
Ethiopia, and saw his own countrymen drinking coffee there. He
was reportedly impressed with the drink which cured him of
some affliction, and his approval made it soon popular among
the dervishes of the Yemen who used it in religious
ceremonies, and introduced it to Mecca.
The first
coffee house
Mecca that the first coffee houses are said to have been
established. Known as Kaveh Kanes, they were originally
religious meeting places, but soon became social meeting
places for gossip, singing and story-telling. With the spread
of coffee as a popular beverage it soon became a subject for
heated debate among devout Muslims.
The Arabic word
for coffee, kahwah, is also one of several words for wine. In
the process of stripping the cherry husk, the pulp of the bean
was fermented to make a potent liquor. The Quran forbade the
use of wine or intoxicating beverages, but those Muslims in
favour of coffee argued that it was not an intoxicant but a
stimulant. The dispute over coffee came to a head in 1511 in
Mecca.
The governor of
Mecca, Beg, saw some people drinking coffee in a mosque as
they prepared a night-long prayer vigil. Furious he drove them
from the mosque and ordered all coffee houses to be closed. A
heated debate ensued, with coffee being condemned as an
unhealthy brew by two unscrupulous Persian doctors, the
Hakimani brothers, who were known to produce whatever
testimony suited the highest bidder. The doctors wanted it
banned, for it was a popular cure among the melancholic
patients who other-wise would have paid the doctors to cure
them. The mufti of Mecca spoke in defence of coffee.
The issue was
only resolved when the Sultan of Cairo intervened and
reprimanded the Khair Beg for banning a drink that was widely
enjoyed in Cairo without consulting his superior. In 1512,
when Khair Beg was accused of embezzlement, the Sultan had him
put to death. Coffee survived in Mecca.
The picture of
Arabic coffee houses as dens of iniquity and frivolity was
exaggerated by religious zealots. In reality the Middle
Eastern was the forerunner of the European Cafe society and
the coffee houses of London which became famous London clubs.
They were enlightened meeting places for intellectuals, where
news and gossip exchanged and clients regularly entertained by
traditional story-tellers.
From the Arabian Peninsula coffee traveled to the East. The
Arabs are credited with first bringing coffee to Sri Lanka
(Ceylon) as early as 1505. It is said that fertile coffee
beans, the berries with their husks unbroken, were first
introduced into South-West India by one Baba Budan on his
return from a pilgrimage to Mecca in the 17th century.
By 1517 coffee had reached Constantinople, following the
conquest of Egypt by Salim I, and it was established in
Damascus by 1530. Coffee houses were opened in Constantinople
in 1554, and their advent provoked religiously inspired riots
that temporarily closed them. But they survived their critics,
and their luxurious interiors became a regular rendezvous for
those engaged in radical political thought and dissent.
From time to
time coffee continued to be banned, the target of religious
zealots, and at one time second offenders were sewn into
leather bags and thrown into the Bosphorus. But coffee was
profitable and finally achieved respectability when it became
subject to tax.
Venetian
traders had introduced coffee to Europe by 1615, a few years
later than tea which had appeared in 1610. Again its
introduction aroused controversy in Italy when some clerics,
like the mullahs of Mecca, suggested it should be
excommunicated as it was the Devil’ s work. However, Pope
Clement VIII (1592- 1605) enjoyed it so much that he declared
that ˜coffee should be baptized to make it a true Christian
drink."
The first
coffee house opened in Venice in 1683. The famous Cafe Florian
in the Piazza San Marco, established in 1720, is the oldest
surviving coffee house in Europe. Throughout the 17th and 18th
centuries coffee houses proliferated in Europe. Nothing quite
like the like the coffee houses, or cafe, had ever existed
before, the novelty of a place to enjoy a relatively
inexpensive and stimulating beverage in convivial company
established a social habit that has endured for over 400
years.
The first
coffee house in England was opened in Oxford, not London, by a
man called Jacob in 1650. A coffee club established near all
Soul's College eventually becoming the Royal Society. London's
first coffee house was in St. Michael's Alley and opened in
1652. And the most famous name in the world of insurance,
Lloyds of London, began life as a coffee house in Tower
Street, founded by Edward Lloyd in 1688 who used to prepare
lists of ships that his clients had insured. With the rapid
growth in popularity of coffee houses, by the 17th century the
European powers were competing with each other to establish
coffee plantations in their respective colonies. In 1616 the
Dutch gained a head start by taking a coffee plant from Mocha
to the Netherlands, and they began large scale cultivation in
Sri Lanka in1658. In 1699 cuttings were successfully
transplanted from Malabar to Java. Samples of Java coffee
plants were sent to Amsterdam in 1706, were seedlings were
grown in botanical gardens and distributed to horticulturists
throughout Europe.
A few years
later, in 1718, the Dutch transplanted the coffee to Surinam
and soon after the plant became widely established in South
America, which was to become the coffee centre of the world.
In 1878 the story of coffee's journey around the world came
full circle when the British laid foundations of Kenya's
coffee industry by introducing plants to British East Africa
right next to neighbouring Ethiopia, where coffee had first
been discovered a 1,000 years before.
Today Ethiopia,
is Africa's major exporter of Arabica beans, the quality
coffee of the world, and the variety that originated in
Ethiopia, is still the only variety grown there. Coffee
Arabica, which was identified by the botanist Linnaeus in
1753, is one of the two major species used in most production,
and presently accounts around 70 per cent of the world's
coffee.
major species
is Coffee Canefora, or Robusta, whose production is increasing
now due to better yields from Robusta trees and their
hardiness against decease. Robusta coffee is mostly used in
blend, but Arabica is the only coffee to be drunk on its own
unblended, and this is the type grown and drunk in Ethiopia,
The Arabica and Robusta trees both produce crops within 3-4
years after planting, and remain productive for 20-30 years.
Arabica trees flourish ideally in a seasonal climate with a
temperature range of 59-75o F, whereas Robusta prefers an
equatorial climate.
Coffee now in its birth place
In Ethiopia's
province of Kaffa a large proportion of the Arabica trees grow
wild amidst the rolling hills and forests of the fertile and
beautiful region.
At an altitude
of 1,500 meters the climate is ideal and the plants are well
protected by the larger forest trees which provide shade from
the midday sun and preserve the moisture in the soil.
Traditionally, these are the ideal conditions for coffee
growing.
There are two
methods of processing coffee: the wet and the dry.
Commercially the wet method is preferred, but the small
producer who picks the cherries wild may save time by
sun-drying the beans after picking, and the sell them direct
to customers in the local market.
At the Haro
Farmer's Co-operative near Jimma the husk of the cherry is
removed mechanically and the bean then fermented in water for
48 hours to remove the sugar. The beans are the dried on racks
in the sun for about a week before being bagged up and sold at
an auction. A smallholder, who may have anything from a half
to two hectares, sells his beans to the Co-op which processes
them and sells them at auction, returning a share of the
profits to the farmer.
In the Jimma
district alone annual production is approximately 30,000 tons.
Nationally the country produces 200,000 tons a year, of which
almost half is for domestic consumption, the highest in
Africa.
Some 12 million
people are dependent on Ethiopia's coffee industry, managed by
the Ethiopian Coffee Export Enterprise ECEE formerly the
Ethiopian Coffee Marketing Corporation. An independent,
profit-making organization, ECEE trades on the open market and
controls about 50 per cent of the market following
liberalization.
ECEE processes
its coffee at five plants in Addis-Ababa with a total capacity
of almost 500 tons a day and a plant in Dire Dawa. The
organization is also building a new 250-ton a day processing
plant for washed coffee.
ECEE's key
markets are Germany, Japan, USA, France and the Middle East
and is focusing on the US specialty market and Scandinavia.
ECEE's major emphasis is on quality products such as premium
blends, organic coffee and original unblended coffees from one
specific plantation or farm. Within Ethiopia, there are some
distinctive varieties that are highly sought after. The
highest grown coffee comes from Harar, where the Long berry
variety is the most popular, having a wine-like flavor and
tasting slightly acidic.
Coffee from
Sidamo in the south has an unusual flavor and is very popular,
especially the beans known as Yirgacheffes. In many ways
Ethiopian coffee is unique, having neither excessive pungency
nor the acidity of the Kenyan brands. It is closest in
character to the Mocha coffee of the Yemen, with which it
supposedly shares a common origin, and it cannot be high
roasted or its character is destroyed. The best Ethiopian
coffee may be compared with the finest coffee in the world,
and premium washed Arabica beans fetch high prices on the
world market. No visit to Ethiopia, is complete without
participating in the elaborate coffee ceremony that is
Ethiopia's traditional form of hospitality. Invariably
conducted by a beautiful young girl in traditional Ethiopian
costume, the ceremonial apparatus is arranged upon a bed of
long grasses. The green beans are roasted in a pan over a
charcoal brazier, the rich aroma of coffee mingling with the
heady smell of incense that is always burned during the
ceremony. The beans are then pounded with a pestle and mortar,
and the ground coffee then brewed in a black pot with a narrow
spout.
Traditional
accompaniments are popcorn, also roasted on the fire, and the
coffee is sugared to be drunk from small handless cups.
Taken and
modified from
Selamta, The In-Flight Magazine of
ETHIOPIAN AIRLINES. |