Coffee
How coffee conquered the world: origins, brewing science, and the modern industry
- Coffee extraction chemistry and brewing science
Coffee brewing is a controlled chemical extraction in which water selectively dissolves over a thousand compounds from roasted grounds in a sequence that determines whether the cup tastes sour, bitter, sweet, or balanced.
5sourcesupdated 1 week ago - Global coffee production and trade
From Yemen's 17th-century monopoly to Brazil's modern dominance, the global coffee trade has been shaped by colonial botany, slave labor, geopolitical rivalry, and the rise of new producing nations across three continents.
5sourcesupdated 1 week ago - Origins and early spread of coffee
Coffee's story begins with wild plants in Ethiopia and the first cultivated beverage in 15th-century Yemen, from which it spread across the Islamic world and into Europe and Asia over the following two centuries.
5sourcesupdated 1 week ago - Coffeehouse as social institution
From 15th-century Mecca to 17th-century London, the coffeehouse has repeatedly emerged as a hub of public conversation, intellectual exchange, and political life, reshaping urban culture wherever coffee spread.
5sourcesupdated 1 week ago - Caffeine biology and neuroscience
Caffeine keeps people awake by blocking adenosine receptors in the brain, a mechanism that also interacts with dopamine signaling, produces tolerance through receptor proliferation, and drives the familiar withdrawal headache when intake stops.
3sourcesupdated 1 week ago - Coffee and human health
A large and converging body of epidemiological research finds that moderate coffee consumption — roughly 3–5 cups daily — is associated with reduced risk of several chronic diseases, including type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, certain cancers, depression, and neurodegenerative conditions, though individual tolerance varies considerably.
2sourcesupdated 1 week ago - Coffee processing methods and their flavor impact
The way a coffee cherry is processed after harvest — washed, natural, or honey — is one of the largest determinants of flavor, shaping whether the cup tastes clean and bright, boldly fruity, or sweetly balanced.
2sourcesupdated 1 week ago - Coffee roasting technology and the case for decentralization
Electric, automated roasters are challenging the fossil-fuel-dependent, centralized roasting model by offering cafés a path to fresher coffee, lower emissions, and better economics without sacrificing quality.
1sourceupdated 1 week ago