The lady was draped in loose white robe with a stripe of red running down the length of herrobe. She was sitting on a low stool, facing a tiny wooden desk on which were neatly arrayed arow of tiny handle-less coffee cups, their lips splayed and pressed close to each other. Ajebena, a terracotta jar with a long spout, used to brew coffee, sat on the side of the table. A tiny incense burner gave off plumes of smoke. The floor was strewn with aromatic grasses.
Ethiopian Coffee CultivationThe centre of origin of Arabica coffee in Ethiopia is its forests, especially those of the highlands of Kafa, which presumably is what the word 'coffee' evolved from. Coffee grows happily here, twined with fruit trees, cardamom, pepper and bamboo - a nourishing ecosystem. To this day, forested coffee remains one of the country's means of cultivation. It is most likely from here that coffee spread, out of Ethiopia, first to Yemen through trade, later spidering its way throughout the world.
However, by far the largest method of coffee cultivation in the country is that of small family plots. Everywhere I travelled to, the people I spoke to, had their own garden plots of land: drivers, tourist guides, shopkeepers, almost everyone I spoke to told me that they helped on their family coffee plots. All of rural Ethiopia seems to be dotted with these, making it all the more special whenever I was invited into people's homes for a cup.
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Photo Credit: iStock
Ethiopian Coffee CultivationThe centre of origin of Arabica coffee in Ethiopia is its forests, especially those of the highlands of Kafa, which presumably is what the word 'coffee' evolved from. Coffee grows happily here, twined with fruit trees, cardamom, pepper and bamboo - a nourishing ecosystem. To this day, forested coffee remains one of the country's means of cultivation. It is most likely from here that coffee spread, out of Ethiopia, first to Yemen through trade, later spidering its way throughout the world.
However, by far the largest method of coffee cultivation in the country is that of small family plots. Everywhere I travelled to, the people I spoke to, had their own garden plots of land: drivers, tourist guides, shopkeepers, almost everyone I spoke to told me that they helped on their family coffee plots. All of rural Ethiopia seems to be dotted with these, making it all the more special whenever I was invited into people's homes for a cup.
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