![]() Today, many cafes offer poetry readings and live music. By the ’50s, they were doing poetry readings there. Tiny tenements made for cramped quarters, so eager to socialize on the cheap these poets and novelists met up at coffee shops in the 1940s. And wouldn’t you know it, these were the places the writers commonly associated with the Beats hung out. Here in America, we can thank Italian Americans for setting up coffee shops in places like Greenwich Village and North Beach. Much like Starbucks is today, coffee houses back then were places writers could go in, order a cup of coffee, and spend hours writing or conversing. Again, it wasn’t so much about the coffee-though certainly there was an art to making a good cup of coffee. In any regard, coffee houses became the place for artists and writers to meet in nineteenth-century Europe. Johannes Theodat was a Greek who set up the first coffee shop in Vienna. Apparently, Greeks had an impact on coffee culture, which is no surprise really when you think about the Greek Empire’s impact on history. It was about 1645 when the first European coffee shop opened, and that was in Venice, Italy. In fact, they became so popular in Mecca-not simply because they served coffee but because they became gathering spots, where people could discuss politics-that they were banned in the early 1500s. Having first been cultivated by Arabs, coffee shops were prevalent in the Ottoman Empire. From there it reached Europe and Asia, only coming to the Americas later on. From what I’ve read, coffee originated in Africa, and by the sixteenth century had found its way over to the Middle East. ![]() Let me kick things off by first telling you a little about the history of coffee. It can fuel a writer’s creativity.Īs usual, I’ll be putting a literary spin on things. A pot of coffee can be shared amongst friends. So often we get hung up on fancy restaurants that serve rich meals that we take the ordinary for granted, even though it sustains us. So why devote a whole week to International Coffee Day 2013? Well, one of my missions here on this blog is “embracing the beatific.” For me, part of that means noticing and celebrating the little things in life. My conclusion is that the history of this festival is relatively short and my own conspiracy theory is that some sort of a national coffee association started to promote it as a way to generate more business. ![]() In 2010, there has been news on national newspaper that briefly talks about activities on the day. It’s Coffee Week! Sunday, September 29, is International Coffee Day, so I’m devoting the entire week to all things coffee.įirst, a bit about Coffee Day, via Squidoo:Īfter a comprehensive research, it looks like that people started to talk about this festival as early as 2005, but there has been virtually on mentioning of this term until 2009 when a few local coffee shops began offering free drinks and discount coupons. ![]()
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