Coffee story
If Europe was a drink, it would be coffee
Consumption
in Europe ranges from twelve kilos per person per year in Finland, to two kilos
in the UK and Czech Republic - it plays a large role in our social lives
By ADRIANO FARANO, FRANCE
Translation: GEMMA
SMITH
This
article has been provided by our new partner:
There are many different types of coffee throughout Europe. Each country has
its own types and own names for it, which reflect not only the way the drink is
served, but also its role in their culture. In Naples you would order a sospeso
and in Sweden a fika, both names that suggest having a break. In Malaga
a milky coffee can be known as a nube ('clouds') and in Belarus coffee
is seen as an aphrodisiac.
Coffee cultivation did not begin in Europe,
but in Ethiopia. Coffee then travelled to Arabia in the thirteenth century, later
journeying to Turkey in 1517 where it is still known as kahve. From here,
coffee took a short trip to Venice where it was first served in 1615. From there,
it started to spread throughout Europe. The Sicilian Francesco Procopio dei Coltelli
later took coffee to Paris. His Procope café became famous as the meeting place
for the authors of the French revolution. The ultimate stimulating drink was associated
with progressive thinking, an idea which is reflected by the creation in 1764
of the Milanese magazine 'Il Caffé'.
But, what does coffee represent
for today's Europeans? Thanks to cafebabel.com's European community, we have been
able to confirm that coffee is directly liked to many aspects of social behaviour.
So, if in Athens someone invites you out for a coffee, prepare yourself for hours
on end (often between two and four!) of chatting and gossip. In Antwerp, like
in all of Europe, 'to go for coffee together' means to go have a chat, even when
there might not be coffee involved. Swedish 'fika' also means 'getting together
with someone', like in the UK ('wanna come upstairs for a coffee?'). In Turkey,
a coffee date could be very important; it is a coffee that a fiancée must serve
during the meeting held by the two families to decide whether or not the marriage
should go ahead. In Belarus, on the other hand, the connotations of a coffee date
are a little 'spicier', as coffee is considered an aphrodisiac, to help you 'stay
awake'.
But
even though coffee has spread throughout Europe, not everyone serves it in the
same way. The Italians and the Portuguese are the only ones to drink a true 'long'
coffee, but the Italians (as the video below by the artist Bozzetto shows), are
a little more complicated than that. In Rome, a genovés is a chocolate
coffee, or rather a mini cappuccino. It is mini because the Genoese people are
known for being especially stingy. In Naples, there is a custom around the pendiente,
a coffee you pay for, for the next homeless client who orders one. In Malaga,
coffee has an infinite number of names according to the proportions of milk and
coffee used.
In Greece, Bulgaria and Turkey, as well as hot coffee, the
trend for the frappé is growing (hence the name of the babelblog). In these countries
as well as in Naples, you can also find elderly ladies who will lead your future
in the remains in the bottom of your coffee cup.
Coffee is also very fashionable
in France and is often associated with the stress of Parisian life. As the video
(below, a word from a Neapolitan in Paris) by Oldelaf and Senor D. Pero shows,
it is very difficult for an Italian to find a proper large coffee in Paris.
Thanks to Pierpaolo di Pozzetto, which has the best coffee in Paris
A
million thanks (one for each type of coffee that exists) to the following cafebabelians:
Elina (Greece), Waldemar (Sweden), Lotte (Belgium), Pedro (Spain), Jane(France),
Hana y Marysia (Poland), Christiane (Germany), Ozcan (Turkey), Andrea (Italy),
Michael (Austria), Milos (Serbia), Anna (Holland), Sergei (Belorussia), Zlatimira
y Mina (Bulgaria), Zuzana (Slovakia), Joshua (USA), Jo (Great Britain)
You
can read an original
article here.
(Published: 15.11.2008.)