Coffee review

The first cup of coffee in the world comes from the source and history of Arabian coffee.

Published: 2024-11-05 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2024/11/05, If you ask an Arab friend what his most indispensable diet is, nine times out of ten he will hold out two fingers, dates and coffee. The Arab region is the main jujube growing area, where people love dates are well known, and coffee is generally closely related to European and American fashion and business atmosphere, how can it be an indispensable element of Middle Eastern customs? In fact, the first cup of coffee in the world

If you ask an Arab friend what his most indispensable diet is, nine times out of ten he will hold out two fingers-"dates and coffee". The Arab region is the main jujube growing area, where people love dates are well known, and coffee is generally closely related to European and American fashion and business atmosphere, how can it be an indispensable element of Middle Eastern customs? In fact, the first cup of coffee in the world was made by Arabs. The most common streets in Arab countries are three kinds of shops, namely, gold shops, dessert shops and coffee shops. Pure Arabica coffee is a drink that needs to be sipped slowly in a small cup. The Arab "coffee path" is very deep.

Coffee shops in Arab countries generally cover an area of a few square meters, with uniform white powder walls, chest-high counters and a multi-functional coffee machine, as well as triangular figures piled up of Nestle coffee cans and milk powder cans. the boss, who is also a waiter and cashier, stands behind the "big triangle". Coffee shops usually sell only mocha, cappuccino, American coffee, Arabica coffee and hot chocolate. Coffee shops are always overcrowded. But you should not think that Arabs drink coffee casually just because of the approachable coffee shop. In fact, if time permits, Arabs have a traditional ritual for drinking coffee, such as burning incense before drinking coffee, and spreading spices in the place where they drink it, and then the host and guest appreciate the quality of the coffee, from color to aroma, study it carefully, and then put out the exquisite and valuable coffee utensils for fun, and then begin to cook strong coffee. Arab friends once invited journalists to taste the real Arabica coffee. The friend took out an immeasurably small coffee set-a large kettle with a handle, a small teacup half the size of a hand, and a copper spoon not much bigger than an ear-digging spoon. Then there is a series of tedious steps: boil water, cut ginger, scoop sugar, and then add a bag of black powder and some unknown Arabic spices. It tastes stronger than western-style coffee mixed with milk and sugar, and the first taste reminds me of ginger soup, which is often drunk in China. If a person is invited to someone else's house for coffee, it shows the most sincere respect of the host. The guest should show his heartfelt gratitude and remember that his mouth is full of coffee grounds and cannot drink water, because it means that the guest is dissatisfied with the host's coffee and will greatly hurt the host's self-esteem.

The first cup of coffee in the world was made by Arabs. When Europeans first came into contact with coffee, they called the seductive drink "Arabian wine". In the literature left by many European travelers in the 16th century, Arabs sipped a kind of black honey boiled with black seeds. Long before Europeans knew about coffee, Arabs knew how to roast coffee and retain its fragrance in the 3rd century. The traditional production process of Arabica coffee is to use dripping method to make it, adding traditional Arab spices such as cinnamon and cardamom to cook. Although its taste is very different from that of modern western-style coffee, it is the ancestor and prototype of coffee. Coffee "eight King Kong" mocha coffee is made in Yemen, one of the oldest Arab countries. Mocha, which means chocolate coffee in English, is named after the Red Sea seaside city of Mocha in Yemen. The port city monopolized the export of coffee in the 15th century, which had a particular impact on the coffee trade sold to the Arabian Peninsula.

0