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Germany is the world's second largest
consumer of coffee in terms of volume at 16 pounds per person.
Over 53 countries grow coffee worldwide,
but all of them lie along the equator between the tropic
of Cancer and Capricorn.
An acre of coffee trees can produce
up to 10,000 pounds of coffee cherries. That amounts to
approximately 2,000 pounds of beans after hulling or milling.
The percolator was invented in 1827
by a French man. It would boil the coffee producing a bitter
tasting brew. Today most people use the drip or filtered
method to brew their coffee.
With the exception of Hawaii and
Puerto Rico, no coffee is grown in the United States or
its territories.
Up until the 1870's most coffee was
roasted at home in a frying pan over a charcoal fire. It
wasn't until recent times that batch roasting became popular.
Each year some 7 million tons of
green beans are produced world wide. Most of which is hand
picked.
Did you know???
27% of U.S. coffee drinkers and 43%
of German drinkers add a sweetener to their coffee.
The world's largest coffee producer
is Brazil with over 3,970 million coffee trees. Colombia
comes in second with around two thirds of Brazil's production.
Hard bean means the coffee was grown
at an altitude above 5000 feet.
Arabica and Robusta trees can produce
crops for 20 to 30 years under proper conditions and care.
Most coffee is transported by ships.
Currently there are approximately 2,200 ships involved in
transporting the beans each year.
The popular trend towards flavored
coffees originated in the United States during the 1970's.
October 1st is the official Coffee
Day in Japan.
The first coffee tree in the Western
Hemisphere was brought from France to the Island of Martinique
in the 1720's.
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