Coffee review

Samba from South America is a strong producer of Brazilian coffee beans.

Published: 2024-09-19 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2024/09/19, Coffee, as one of the three major beverages in the world, has a long history. In the long river of coffee development, being known as the coffee kingdom is not an European country that promotes coffee, but comes from South America's Samba. The earliest coffee exports were shipped from Maranion in northeastern Brazil to Lisbon in 1731, but Rio de Janeiro soon became Brazil's coffee exporter.

Coffee, as one of the three major beverages in the world, has a long history. In the long river of coffee development, being known as the coffee kingdom is not an European country that promotes coffee, but comes from South America's samba-Brazil.

The earliest coffee exports were shipped from Maranion in northeastern Brazil to Lisbon in 1731, but Rio de Janeiro soon became a distribution center for Brazilian coffee exports and helped Brazil maintain its trade balance for a long time. In the 19th century, coffee was the only product that did not encounter fierce international competition among all Brazilian exports. In the first 20 years of the 20th century, Brazil's coffee production accounted for 77% of the world's total output, accounting for about 53% of Brazil's total exports in 1908. Coffee undoubtedly occupies an absolute dominant position in Brazil's economic life. In Brazil, all kinds of coffee houses can be seen everywhere in both urban and rural areas.

Today, Brazil is still an undisputed coffee country, with the highest production and export volume in the world. Any change in Brazil's annual coffee production will affect the price trend of the international coffee market. According to statistics, Brazil has 3.97 billion coffee trees and produced 44.57 million bags of coffee in 2014. The number of people engaged in coffee production is two to three times that of Colombia, the second largest coffee producer in the world.

After hundreds of years of edification, coffee has long become an indispensable necessity in Brazilian life. Each Brazilian drinks an average of seven to eight cups of coffee a day. (the average person in our country drinks only five cups of coffee a year, which is less than the amount of coffee in Brazil!). Even poor families have a coffee machine. Whenever a guest comes to visit, the first thing the hospitable Brazilian hostess needs to do is to bring him a strong cup of coffee.

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