The spread and Development of Coffee in China-where did Cafe first come from
The spread and Development of Coffee in China-where did Cafe first come from
In terms of natural conditions, many parts of China are very close to Latin America, South America, India, Indonesia and other places, with congenital conditions for coffee cultivation. However, Chinese people have been drinking tea for thousands of years. As the origin of tea in the world, there is more or less resistance to coffee as a foreign beverage in consumption habits and concepts. Therefore, for a long time after coffee was introduced into China, coffee cultivation did not receive enough attention, and the expansion was extremely slow.
Until recent years, with the impact of foreign culture and way of life, people's drinks have become increasingly diversified, coffee has entered more and more of the lives of ordinary people, and coffee cultivation has gradually developed. China's coffee consumption is rising year by year, forming a huge potential consumer market.
The great potential of China's coffee market can not be ignored. Some internationally renowned coffee companies have chosen Shanghai as their production base and adopted a long-term strategy to expand the Chinese market. At the same time, China is also actively cultivating its own coffee planting base. Yunnan Province in China is very close to the coffee growing areas of Colombia, in which Simao, Lincang, Dehong, Baoshan and other areas have begun to develop coffee planting industry, and the quality of small-grain coffee has been fully affirmed by international coffee organizations. Industry insiders predict that in the near future, these regions will fill the gap in China in the world coffee planting map.
Today, there are considerable coffee planting bases in Yunnan, Hainan, Guangxi, Guangdong and other provinces in China, and some world-famous coffee companies, such as Maxwell, Nestl é, Colombia and so on, have set up branches in China. They not only sell coffee products to China, but also purchase coffee beans from coffee planting bases in China, which not only promote coffee sales in China, but also promote the development of coffee planting industry.
In the 1930s, the earliest cafe in Shanghai opened on the Bund for foreign sailors to enjoy their coffee, perhaps with a sense of relieving homesickness. Coffee at that time was called "cough potion" by Shanghainese. Of course, this is just a segment of the Shanghai Cafe. In Shanghai at that time, there were many overseas Chinese who returned from overseas. They kept the habit of drinking coffee in their lives-not just going to the cafe. More often, they taste strong coffee in their own restaurant or living room.
But activities such as coffee and afternoon tea have changed since 1949. Before the 1980s, coffee was a strange word and a strange thing for most Chinese people. Although during the period, there were 3.4 yuan cans of Shanghai coffee on the shelves of Xidan Mall. And in the 1970s, some foreign-related hotels began to have their own coffee shops, but they needed foreign exchange coupons to pay, and it was clear that they were for foreign guests-the place and price of coffee were far away from ordinary people. It was not until the 1980s that people became familiar with coffee from advertisements. Instant coffee, for most people, they went through about a decade or so, thinking that "instant coffee is coffee". At that time, glass bottles containing "Nestle" or "McDonnell's" were often placed in cabinets or become cups for owners to drink water in the office, even if they were empty-- not just because they were thick and thick.

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Historical Flavor description of Coffee planting in China introduction to the characteristics of Coffee varieties produced by Taste treatment
Description of the Historical Flavor of Coffee planting in China the great potential of the coffee market in China can not be ignored. Some international coffee companies have chosen Shanghai as the production base and adopted a long-term strategy to expand the Chinese market.
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