
Photo: Green and ripe coffee cherries
For Tonia who wondered how coffee was discovered!
Have you ever wondered how coffee was discovered?
According to records, coffee was first found in the upper plateaus of Abyssinia
(modern day Ethiopia) around the latter part of the 10th Century. But there
are some sources that state coffee was found even earlier than that.
Coffee (Coffea arabica), the seed of a cherry from a shiny leafed small tree,
grows only within ranges from sea level to approximately 6,000 feet in a narrow
sub-tropical belt.
The popularity of coffee spread all over the Middle East, through centuries of
nomadic travels due to the trade and bartering generated during those travels.
Coffee reached Arabia where many coffeehouses started to sprout. It eventually
reached Spain with the Moors who had settled there and to England during the
Crusades.
Coffee became the “patriotic drink of choice” in the American colonies due to
England’s Tax Law of 1773, where by trying to do away with the middle merchants
and underselling tea, the British East India Company was hoping to avoid going
into bankruptcy.
The colonist’s response was to stage the first major protest against
“taxation without representation” by dumping hundreds of tea chests into
Boston Harbor in December of 1773. This act of revolt has been known ever
since as “The Boston Tea Party”. As word spread throughout the colonies,
other coastal towns in every one of the thirteen colonies joined in and
dumped their tea into the ocean.
As legend goes the coffee berry was discovered by Kaldi, a goat herder or
shepherd who, around 600-800 AD, was tending to his animals one night on the
mountainside in Eastern Africa, around the regions of what we know today as
Ethiopia.
Kaldi noticed that his herd was acting quite merry and strange, leaping and
cavorting after eating the little red cherries from bushes growing wild in
the area. Curious, he picked some and tasted them himself. He found that
the berries invigorated him and made him wide-awake!
Kaldi decided to take the berries to the abbot of the monastery in his
village. Upon hearing the report on the goats’ behavior after eating the
berries, the abbot condemned them as evil and threw them in the fire to
cleanse them.
The wonderful aroma of the berries as they roasted brought all the villagers
out to investigate. Soon they were raking them from the coals and grinding
the roasted berries between rocks and adding hot water to make a drink.
From then on, legend says they all embraced coffee drinking as it kept them
awake during the long hours of prayers in the mosques and monasteries.
Apparently, the Dutch were the first Europeans to grow coffee commercially
in Java around 1696. The French took the plant to the Caribbean, where many
of the islands depended on coffee crops for their survival. It was being
grown in Cuba as early as 1748.

From Cuba, the Spanish took it to Central America and it eventually was
brought to Hawaii in 1825. Now coffee is grown in several of the islands
with Kona grown coffee being the best known. For the last few years though,
several coffee farms have sprouted in the Hamakua area with very good results.
Whether the legend of Kaldi and his goats is fact or fiction, coffee has been
around for centuries and I am so grateful to be able to greet each day with
that wonderful first cup of the aromatic brew!
The following is a yummy recipes to help you launch your own legend! - Sorry I have no picture of it!
CAFÉ CON LECHE CUSTARD
Café con leche is the traditional “latte” that most Latinos drink for
breakfast. It combines a strong espresso coffee with steamed milk and
sugar. Yields 4 portions
4 Tablespoons cornstarch
3 cups milk
1 cup heavy cream
2-1/2 Tablespoons instant coffee powder
1 cup sugar
2 eggs
Whipped cream
Chocolate covered coffee beans for garnish
Stir cornstarch in one cup of milk, stirring until smooth. In top of a double
boiler, pour the cornstarch mixture, the rest of the milk, cream, instant
coffee powder and sugar. Stir over medium-high heat until thickened.
Cover and let simmer about 10 minutes.
Beat the eggs well. Slowly add 1 cup of the hot coffee mixture to the eggs,
beating continuously so eggs don’t curdle.
Pour egg mixture into remaining coffee mixture in the double boiler, still
over low heat, beating well to incorporate. Cover and simmer for 2 minutes.
Remove from heat and pour into coffee cups. Cover with plastic wrap, leave
to cool and refrigerate. When chilled, top with fresh whipped cream and one
chocolate covered coffee bean.
(c) by Sonia Martinez - originally published under my weekly column HELE MAI ‘AHA’AINA!
(Come Join the Feast!) on February 25th, 2003 in the Hawaii Tribune-Herald of Hilo, Hawaii
TROPICAL TASTE: The Big Island is the Coffee Island
Homemade Christmas Gifts - Kona Coffee Liqueur


Comments: 44
My husband fell in love with Kona coffee the first time we went to Hawaii, so I often buy him some as a holiday gift. For my son, I purchase Guatemala's "Peace Coffee."
I don't attest as to the truth of the legend, but the rest of the information is factual....or at least my sources were....;-)))
Masterful as alway, Sonia. I've heard your story before and Dannielle, I'm wondering what story you are talking about.
I *love* coffee, the stronger, the better.
Mo, the fruit is called a cherry, it does not become a bean until after it is hulled (getting rid of the pulp which is slightly grapey, though it doesn't taste like a grape) and fermented and then dried (or at least that is what I got from the tour at the
Hilo Coffee Mill recently....
Haven't 'seen' you around lately.
Yes, you're right, the cherry is the whole fruit and the bean is the seed
I think the Boston Tea Party was the first known patriotic 'foodie' revolt that I know of......or at least that I can think about at the moment!
It's a matter of what wasn't explored by the author and is thus left up to the (limited) imagination of this reader.
Sonia, there is little attention given to cuisine in this textbook -- it's mostly politics and social aspects and economics, with a healthy focus on the arts. But, as with most texts, and considering the timeline, much is left out for independent research efforts. When I find a good book on coffee or Latin American cooking -- or if you do -- let's exchange titles!
Dalal, all the documents I have read and the research I have done seem to point that it was indeed discovered in Abyssinia, now Ethiopia and then started traveling to other nearby countries such as Yemen, that bordered the Arabian sea ....and that it then traveled through Arabia and on to the East and then the New World where it was able to grow in countries that lay within the 'coffee belt' or the tropics.
Afterall, Nothing is arabian I guess, not even the lands according to modern documents.
I was laughing when I read about the Boston Tea Party, for did I not bring each of my boys when they hit 5th grade to walk the Freedom Trail....and of course in our backpacks was loose tea for them to throw in the harbour. Makes history real for them.
Hi, Bob! Love your rhyming line.....!
How fun for your students to have an adventuresome teacher....! I would have loved to have been able to do something like that when I was studying that part of American History....!
BTW, it wasn't only Boston....although they set the trend, but several ports along the Eastern seashore did the same....including Edenton, NC who had their own "Tea Party" dumping!
Great read!
Happy Thanksgiving to you and yours... Aloha
Joan, I am allowed one cup a day, so I make it count....I use my tall Gather mug...! but I sneak some coffee desserts too once in a while....
Debbie, isn't the image on gamboling goats a charming one? I too don't care if it is myth or fact...I love the story!
Wow, Apryl...if your sitter weaned you on Bustelo then you really had the strong stuff early on!!! Thank you for the Thanksgiving wishes from both me and Anthony and we wish you the same.....he has been visiting a friend in Kona side since Friday and will fly home tomorrow evening....I will fly to Honolulu in the morning and spend the day over there visiting a foodie friend from Arizona......Anthony's flight comes in just 20 minutes or so before mine, so we will come home together....Sorry your Anthony won't be home for this one!
necee, thank you so much! Happy Thanksgiving to you and yours also!
Hey, Sue....I love the smell of roasting coffee....and I LOVE coffee ice cream, and mocha fudge.....and coffee jello and the abor recipe for cafe con leche puding!!!!
;-))))
Hau`oli la Ho`omaika`i! [hau' oh lee hoh' oh mai' kai'!] Happy Thanksgiving to y'all!!!!
Hau`oli la Ho`omaika`i to you too, Sonia! Or as folks in Wisconsin seem more likely to say, Happy Turkey Day!
Hi, Sarina...it is good! Hope you like it!
Thank you, Rita!
Up until a few days ago I just really drank it, not knowing anything to much about it
really nice article...
Jennifer, thank you and hope the 19 days go quickly so your baby will be here for a joyous Christmas!
I love that story, whether it is true or not!
Hawaii's Kona coffee has been considered way up there among the top of the line coffees, like Jamaican Blue Mountain.....but the rest of the island is beginning to show their stuff and some have beaten Kona as far as taste and body!!!
Kona better watch out!
Thank you for dropping by and commenting!