Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • Have you ever wondered

  • how all those

  • different coffee shops can survive

  • when there are so many of them?

  • It's because coffee

  • is the world's most popular beverage

  • after water.

  • "Someone said something about coffee."

  • Worldwide, the coffee trade exceeds

  • $10 billion U.S. every year.

  • So why is coffee so popular?

  • And how did the world

  • become crazy for coffee?

  • Keep watching as we explore

  • your favorite cup of Joe.

  • Legend has it that around 850 CE,

  • coffee was discovered

  • by an Ethiopian shepherd

  • named Kaldi.

  • After seeing his goats becoming

  • more active after eating fruits from a bush,

  • he tried the fruit himself

  • and felt more alert and energized.

  • Although the story

  • is likely more legend than truth,

  • coffee does seem

  • to have originated

  • in the Kaffa region of Ethiopia.

  • From there

  • it spread across the Arabian peninsula

  • where it was known

  • as the "wine of Araby."

  • Coffee drinking

  • became a social experience

  • as people gathered to talk,

  • play chess or listen to music

  • at coffee houses known as

  • These places became

  • so important for conducting business,

  • discussing news

  • or exchanging information

  • that they became known

  • as the "Schools of the Wise".

  • "Drink the coffee

  • it will make you feel better."

  • By the 17th century,

  • Venetian merchants had brought coffee

  • back to Europe with them.

  • However,

  • people were suspicious of the new brew.

  • "Wow."

  • The local clergy of Venice referred to it

  • as the "bitter invention of Satan."

  • "Oh my ***"

  • But when Pope Clement VIII tried it,

  • he gave his approval.

  • Its popularity

  • quickly spread throughout England,

  • Austria, France, Germany and Holland.

  • The Dutch loved it so much

  • that they tried

  • to cultivate coffee themselves.

  • But Holland isn't exactly known

  • for having a tropical climate.

  • After failing to grow the plant

  • on their home turf,

  • the Dutch exported plants

  • from Yemen's port of Mocha

  • to their Indonesian colony of Java.

  • The success of their

  • Mocha Java cultivation

  • led to plantations

  • in Ceylon and Sumatra.

  • The Dutch then gave

  • some of their plants to the French

  • as part of a military agreement.

  • France transported them

  • to its colonies in Central America,

  • where the coffee plant

  • quickly took root.

  • Eventually, coffee found

  • its way to North America.

  • And we are grateful.

  • Although there were

  • some minor boycotts of tea in 1774,

  • the popularity of coffee

  • in the United States

  • Nice try Boston.

  • The truth is

  • that coffee from Brazil and the Caribbean

  • was less expensive

  • and easier to obtain

  • that tea from China or India.

  • Soon, coffee became

  • the go-to drink for breakfast,

  • instead of the usual beer and wine,

  • because of its ability to stimulate us.

  • Wait, beer and wine for breakfast

  • was a thing?

  • Born too late.

  • Coffee is 0.65 to 2.3% caffeine,

  • depending on the roast

  • and refinement process.

  • Your liver breaks down caffeine

  • into metaboliltes,

  • giving you that energetic buzz.

  • For many people,

  • a day can't start

  • without the stimulating effects

  • of coffee.

  • But regardless

  • of its effect on our bodies,

  • it really all comes down to taste.

  • "I love coffee."

  • Despite its aftertaste,

  • coffee can have

  • a complex and rich flavor.

  • That flavor is determined

  • by the type of roast,

  • the way it's prepared

  • and even where the beans

  • are cultivated.

  • For example,

  • coffees from Columbia and Kenya

  • have a fruity taste

  • similar to berries

  • while those from Ethiopia and Guatemala

  • have a citrusy flavor.

  • "Sounds interesting."

  • There are several species

  • of coffee plants.

  • The most common

  • are Coffea arabica

  • and Coffea canephora.

  • After harvesting,

  • the beans are removed

  • from the fruit and roasted.

  • The length of the roast

  • brings out different flavors

  • in the beans.

  • The beans are ground to a powder,

  • and the size of the grinds

  • can affect the final flavor.

  • A finely ground coffee

  • will release its flavors quicker

  • than a coarser grind.

  • The grounds are brewed

  • in hot water and filtered

  • to make the perfect cup of java.

  • So, how did the world

  • become crazy for coffee?

  • What is your favorite cup

  • of rocket fuel?

  • Let us know in the Comments.

  • And now that we've looked

  • at one of the world's

  • most common drinks,

  • let's find out why truffles are so rare.

  • We'll do that on another episode of

Have you ever wondered

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it

B1 US

為什麼全世界的人都愛喝咖啡(How the World Became Crazy for Coffee)

  • 31 1
    Sandra posted on 2021/11/02
Video vocabulary