7 Things You Might Not Know About Coffee
Coffee is a favorite beverage for many people, especially office workers, who may drink coffee regularly every day. Coffee also has many health benefits, and there are 7 things about it that you may not know.
Coffee is a favorite beverage for many people, especially office workers, who may drink coffee regularly every day. Coffee also has many health benefits, and there are 7 things about it that you may not know.
I sat with my friend in a well-known coffee shop in a neighboring town of Venice, Italy, the city of lights and water.
Another coffee shop to check out is Who Together — a café that’s almost magical because it’s nearly hidden behind the garden trees. To discover it, you have to look for a feline or two. Expect a café filled with cuteness, as cats freely roam the area. Inside is a pastel-colored haven and feline illustrations fill the walls. You can take a seat on a tatami mat to enjoy your refreshments. Of course, the coffee here adds to the “zen” atmosphere with the slightly acidic taste coming from the Ethiopian and El Salvadoran beans they use.
Vietnamese Egg coffee (ca phe trung) is made by beating an egg yolk with sweetened condensed milk makes an airy, creamy, meringue-like fluff.
COFFEE CULTURE, DRINKS, IMPRESSIVE
Dalgona coffee was given its nickname in South Korea due to how a lot it tastes like the retro toffee-like sweet dalgona.
According to legend, we owe many delicious things to the Battle of Vienna, such as the creation of the croissant, the bagel, and the spreading of coffee.
The spices are super strong, the tea-to-milk ratio is perfect, it’s cheaper and has no weird preservatives or additives. While the tea is warm and the milk is frothy, let’s just sip, savoring the new season upon us. This also works well iced with cold instead of steamed milk.
Coffee lovers around the nation might not day off work on National Coffee Day, but they can celebrate with a cup of one of the world’s most popular drinks. Some local and national businesses are offering free or discounted cups of coffee.
Kopi luwak coffee is made from coffee beans that are eaten and excreted by civets. Products are often mislabeled as “wild-sourced”, but many civets are actually confined to small, barren cages.
Coffee has been part of human culture for a long time. It has a great history and besides its ritualistic use, it is most commonly regarded as an “upper” by people who wake up early, have to stay up late, or feel tired in the middle of the day.
Drip filter coffee is made by pouring hot water over a bed of ground coffee beans, otherwise known as grains, housed in a filter. Gravity pulls water through the filter, dissolving the coffee into the liquid on its way through.
Three coffee substitutes to get you through the day (and off the exhausting caffeine treadmill).
Dandelion Tea tastes a lot like coffee. You can drink this roasty-flavored tea as you would coffee—black, white, and with a little sweetener. The Chinese drink this beverage to heal and cleanse the liver.
Chai Tea is rich, sweet and spicy—a perfect comfort drink with a third-less caffeine than coffee. Cinnamon, cardamon, ginger, black pepper, and cloves soothe the lungs and promote circulation. In Ayurvedic medicine, Chai tea is thought to be calming, clarifying, and revitalizing for both mind and body.
I was a little exited when I came across this recipe for Dairy-Free Coffee Creamer from Mind Body Green. If you are also on a dairy-free path, or are just curious, I hope you will enjoy it too.
The lovely message regarding the respect we owe to all living beings demonstrates how paper products can impact the environment. The tome is handmade using acid-free paper, ecological ink, and jacaranda seeds that sprout when planted.