The history of coffee is as rich as the brew itself , dating back more than a thousand
years. The first coffee plants are said to have come from the Horn of Africa on the
shores of the Red Sea. Originally, coffee beans were taken as a food and not as a
beverage. East African tribes would grind the coffee cherries together, mixing the
results into a paste with animal fat. Rolled into little balls, the mixture was said
to give warriors much-needed energy for battle. Later, around the year 1000 AD, Ethiopians
concocted a type of wine from coffee berries, fermenting the dried beans in water.
Coffee also grew naturally on the Arabian Peninsula, and it was there, during the
11th century that coffee was first developed into a hot drink.
The so-called stimulating
properties of coffee were thought by many during these ancient times to give a sort
of religious ecstasy, and the drink earned a very mystical sort of reputation, shrouded
in secrecy and associated with priests and doctors. So, it is not surprising that
two prominent legends emerged to explain the discovery of this magic bean.
According
to one story, a goat-herder noticed that his herd became friskier than usual after
consuming the red cherries of a wild coffee shrub. Curious, he tasted the fruit himself.
He was delighted by its invigorating effects, and was even spotted by a group of
nearby monks dancing with his goats. Soon the monks began to boil the bean themselves
and use the liquid to stay awake during all-night ceremonies. The other story is
about a Muslim dervish who was condemned by his enemies to wander in the desert and
eventually die of starvation. In his delirium, the young man heard a voice instructing
him to eat the fruit from a nearby coffee tree. Confused, the dervish tried to soften
the beans in water, and when this failed, he simply drank the liquid. Interpreting
his survival and energy as a sign of God, he returned to his people, spreading the
faith and the recipe.
The cultivation of coffee began sometime in the fifteenth century,
and for many centuries to follow, the Yemen province of Arabia was the world's primary
source of coffee. The demand for coffee in the Near East was very high. The beans
leaving the Yemeni port of Mocha for trade with Alexandria and Constantinople were
highly guarded. In fact, no fertile plants were allowed to leave the country. Despite
the restrictions, Muslim pilgrims from across the globe during their pilgrimages
to Mecca managed to smuggle coffee plants back to their homelands, and coffee crops
soon took root in India.
Coffee also made its way into Europe around this time through
the city of Venice, where fleets traded perfumes, teas, dyes and fabrics with Arabic
merchants along the Spice Route. The beverage eventually gained popularity with the
masses when street lemonade vendors began selling it in addition to cold beverages.
Many European merchants grew accustomed to drinking coffee overseas and brought it
back with them.
By the middle of the 17th century the Dutch dominated the world's
merchant shipping industry, and they introduced large-scale coffee cultivation to
their colonies in Indonesia on the islands of Java, Sumatra, Sulawesi and Bali. Coffee
arrived in Latin America several decades later, when the French brought a cutting
of a coffee plant to Martinique. But when a rare plant disease spread through the
coffee fields of Southeast Asia in the mid 19th century, Brazil emerged as the world's
foremost coffee producer, an honour the country still holds today.