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Welcome to The Coffee Encyclopedia
THE COFFEE ENCYCLOPEDIAThe World's Largest Free Coffee ReferenceSponsored by PuertoRicoCoffeeShop.com☕ Tip: Use the search bar at the top of the page to explore thousands of coffee topicsBrowse the EncyclopediaTen comprehensive volumes covering every aspect of...
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THE COFFEE ENCYCLOPEDIAThe World's Largest Free Coffee Reference250 Books • 5,000+ Articles • Images, Videos & Infographics☕ Proudly Sponsored by PuertoRicoCoffeeShop.com Search 5,000+ Coffee ArticlesUse the search bar at the top of the page to explore the wo...
The Legend of Kaldi the Goat Herder
Summary According to popular legend, coffee was discovered around the 9th century by an Ethiopian goat herder named Kaldi, who noticed his goats became energetic and playful after eating the red cherries of a certain tree. Kaldi tried the cherries himself, fel...
Ethiopia: The Birthplace of Coffee
Summary Ethiopia is universally recognized as the birthplace of coffee, where the Coffea arabica plant first evolved in the highland forests of the Kaffa region more than a thousand years ago. Today, Ethiopia remains one of the world's most important coffee pr...
The Sufi Monks and Coffee's Spiritual Journey
Summary Before coffee became the world's favorite morning drink, it was a sacred tool used by Sufi Muslim mystics in Yemen to stay alert during their all-night prayers and spiritual practices. In the 15th century, Sufi monks discovered that coffee allowed them...
Yemen and the Port of Mocha
Summary Yemen was the first country to cultivate coffee on a commercial scale and the world's sole coffee exporter for nearly two hundred years, from the 15th through the 17th centuries. The Yemeni port of Mocha on the Red Sea became so synonymous with coffee ...
Coffee's Spread to the Ottoman Empire
Summary Coffee entered the Ottoman Empire in the mid-1500s and was quickly embraced as a cultural obsession, with Istanbul becoming the world's most important coffee city within a generation. The Ottomans invented the coffeehouse as a social and political inst...
Coffee Arrives in Europe
Summary Coffee first entered Europe through Venice in the early 1600s via trade routes from the Ottoman Empire, sparking a cultural revolution that would reshape European intellectual, political, and commercial life. Within a century, coffeehouses had spread t...
The Dutch Coffee Empire
Summary The Dutch Empire transformed coffee from an Arabian specialty into a global commodity by establishing the first European-run coffee plantations in their Southeast Asian colonies during the late 1600s. Dutch success in Java made Indonesia one of the ear...
Gabriel de Clieu and the Martinique Seedling
Summary Gabriel de Clieu's 1723 voyage from France to Martinique with a single coffee plant became one of the most consequential botanical transports in history, seeding what would become the Latin American and Caribbean coffee industry. This article documents...
How Coffee Reached Puerto Rico in 1736
Summary Coffee arrived in Puerto Rico in 1736, brought by Martinique colonists seeking new plantation opportunities in Spanish Caribbean territories. The island's mountainous interior, volcanic soil, and tropical climate proved ideal for coffee cultivation, l...
The Golden Age of Puerto Rican Coffee (1800-1898)
Summary Between 1800 and 1898, Puerto Rico experienced an extraordinary coffee boom that transformed the island into one of the world's most respected coffee origins. Puerto Rican coffee earned papal endorsement from Pope Leo XIII, graced the tables of Europe...
Hurricane San Ciriaco and the Coffee Collapse (1899)
Summary On August 8, 1899, Hurricane San Ciriaco struck Puerto Rico as a powerful Category 4 storm, killing approximately 3,000 people and destroying an estimated 80% of the island's coffee crop in a single catastrophic day. The hurricane flattened haciendas,...
Puerto Rican Coffee Under American Rule (1898-1950)
Summary Between 1898 and 1950, Puerto Rico's coffee industry struggled through a half-century of political transition, economic upheaval, and natural disasters under American rule. US tariff policies and sugar-favoring economic strategies pushed coffee from i...
Puerto Rico Coffee Renaissance (1950-Present)
Summary From its diminished mid-20th-century state, Puerto Rican coffee has undergone a remarkable multi-decade renaissance driven by variety innovation, specialty coffee culture, passionate young farmers, and sheer resilience in the face of devastating hurri...
Yauco: Puerto Rico's Crown Coffee Region
Summary Yauco, nestled in the southwestern mountains of Puerto Rico, holds the distinction of being the island's most internationally recognized coffee region. For over two centuries, Yauco has produced premium coffee that earned papal endorsement in the 19th...
Adjuntas: The Coffee Capital of the Mountains
Summary Adjuntas, tucked into the central highlands of Puerto Rico at the heart of the Cordillera Central, has earned its nickname "La Suiza de Puerto Rico" — the Switzerland of Puerto Rico — for its cool mountain climate and dramatic alpine-like scenery. The...
Lares: Coffee, Revolution, and Heritage
Summary Lares holds a unique place in Puerto Rican history and coffee culture. This western mountain municipality was the site of the 1868 Grito de Lares, the historic revolutionary uprising for Puerto Rican independence from Spain, making Lares the symbolic ...