How war has influenced coffee drinking

War has unfortunately been a part of world history for thousands of years, and we see its influence every day in American culture. Not surprising, then, that it also has influenced the history of coffee drinking and (sometimes) how people must adapt when coffee is scarce.

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Perry LuckettComment
Coffee, coffeehouses, and the French Revolution

A common theme in places where rulers banned public coffee drinking (see earlier posts in June) was the danger of coffeehouses as meeting places for talk against the king or government. Enforcement of these bans, from fines to beatings to beheadings, may have helped keep revolt at bay. But in 18th century France, the monarch’s luck ran out.

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Perry LuckettComment
Coffee drinking under siege: A not so cozy history (Part 3)

After a couple posts on coffee bans in exotic locations from Iran to England, we’re moving to the 18th century and back across the English Channel to Sweden and Prussia (Germany). Monarchs in these two countries tried to control or ban coffee partly because they believed it was unhealthy and partly to bring money into their treasuries through license fees and taxes.

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Perry LuckettComment
Update on California Coffee Growers

This article updates information in our March 2018 blog post about plans by Jay Ruskey and Frinj Coffee cooperative members to produce and harvest a new crop in San Diego County, as well as to make Southern California the next leader in the “super specialty coffee industry.” Their first full harvest is in!

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Perry LuckettComment
French Coffee Scene: Roasters and Retailers

This second blog in a series of three about the French coffee scene surveys specialty coffee roasters and chains that are becoming more popular in France. Café baristas haven’t quite reached the status of wine sommeliers in France, but the French are finally starting to come around to specialty coffee.

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Perry LuckettComment