Where the Wild Coffee Grows: The Untold Story of Coffee from the Cloud Forests of Ethiopia to Your Cup
Autor Jeff Koehleren Limba Engleză Hardback – 10 ian 2018
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781632865090
ISBN-10: 1632865092
Pagini: 288
Ilustrații: 1 x 16 page color insert with B&W illustrations throughout
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1632865092
Pagini: 288
Ilustrații: 1 x 16 page color insert with B&W illustrations throughout
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
Perfect
for
coffee
connoisseurs:The
Huffington
Postfound
in
2011
that
the
American
people
drank
146
billion
cups
of
coffee
per
year,
and,
that
same
year,Business
Insidersaid
that
more
than
half
of
voting
age
Americans
drink
coffee
every
single
day.
There's
a
huge
market
of
coffee
lovers,
who
can
take
pleasure
in
readingWhere
the
Wild
Coffee
Growswith
a
cup
of
coffee
in
hand.
Notă biografică
Jeff
Koehleris
the
author
ofDarjeeling:
The
Colorful
History
and
Precarious
Fate
of
the
World's
Greatest
Tea,
winner
of
an
International
Association
of
Culinary
Professionals
Award
and
a
Gourmand
Award;Spain:
Recipes
and
Traditions;Morocco:
A
Culinary
Journey
with
Recipes;
andLa
Paella:
Deliciously
Authentic
Rice
Dishes
from
Spain's
Mediterranean
Coast.
His
work
has
appeared
inSaveur,Food
&
Wine,
NPR,
theWashington
Post,
andLos
Angeles
Times,
among
others.
He
lives
in
Barcelona.
Recenzii
Koehler's
re-creation
of
this
lost
realm--the
Eden
of
the
misnamedCoffeaAbrabica--is
enchanting
and
tragic.
His
depiction
of
its
disappearance
is
almost
Tolkienesque
.
.
.
Koehler
weaves
an
absorbing
narrative
of
politics,
ecology
and
economics.
Jeff Koehler dives deep and ranges widely as he pursues an understanding of the origins of coffee, how it spread around the world from the Horn of Africa, and what lies ahead in an era of climate change and coffee rust. It reads like an engaging multimystery detective novel . . . [We] gain a rich appreciation of the bean that so many depend on every day.
A deep dive into the fascinating history of coffee that meanders from the once-isolated, deep forests of Ethiopia's Kafa region to the warm embrace of your local bodega. Coffee'' path to world domination is anything but straightforward and this story might be unwieldy in the hands of a lesser talent, but Koehler is more than up to the task. A must-read for coffee enthusiasts.
A wide-ranging natural history [that] illuminates the pleasures and the plight of wild coffee.
Blearily sipping a morning espresso? Jeff Koehler's scientific and anthropological chronicle will lend context to your cup.
Fascinating . . . Readers will walk away with a better understanding of how a local crop transformed to an essential global commodity.
There's a lot more that's interesting about coffee than simply its caffeine kick . . . Jeff Koehler details the history of the beloved beverage and the impact that it has had on people all around the world. You'll see why this matters as he discusses the future of coffee and the threats we should be fighting.
An informative, lively history . . . [by] a consistently agile writer . . . Both an informative work for general readers and a page-turning seminar for would-be writers of narrative nonfiction.
Koehler nicely captures the natural beauty and mystery of the birthplace of Arabica coffee . . . A wonderfully informative book about a bean on which many people rely.
Tracing the origin ofCoffea arabicais anything but straightforward, but Koehler confidently leads readers along that winding path, taking relevant detours to reveal the bean's rich history, dedicated stewards, rise to fame, and precarious future . . . Koehler closes his flavorful history on a hopeful note, ultimately transforming this seemingly pedestrian bean into something much more magical.
Well-researched . . . a mix of evocative descriptions and a scholar's eye for detail.
Koehler's account of Kafa's history is a yarn to rival anything from H. Rider Haggard... his history is as stimulating as the superior caffeine he describes.
Jeff Koehler dives deep and ranges widely as he pursues an understanding of the origins of coffee, how it spread around the world from the Horn of Africa, and what lies ahead in an era of climate change and coffee rust. It reads like an engaging multimystery detective novel . . . [We] gain a rich appreciation of the bean that so many depend on every day.
A deep dive into the fascinating history of coffee that meanders from the once-isolated, deep forests of Ethiopia's Kafa region to the warm embrace of your local bodega. Coffee'' path to world domination is anything but straightforward and this story might be unwieldy in the hands of a lesser talent, but Koehler is more than up to the task. A must-read for coffee enthusiasts.
A wide-ranging natural history [that] illuminates the pleasures and the plight of wild coffee.
Blearily sipping a morning espresso? Jeff Koehler's scientific and anthropological chronicle will lend context to your cup.
Fascinating . . . Readers will walk away with a better understanding of how a local crop transformed to an essential global commodity.
There's a lot more that's interesting about coffee than simply its caffeine kick . . . Jeff Koehler details the history of the beloved beverage and the impact that it has had on people all around the world. You'll see why this matters as he discusses the future of coffee and the threats we should be fighting.
An informative, lively history . . . [by] a consistently agile writer . . . Both an informative work for general readers and a page-turning seminar for would-be writers of narrative nonfiction.
Koehler nicely captures the natural beauty and mystery of the birthplace of Arabica coffee . . . A wonderfully informative book about a bean on which many people rely.
Tracing the origin ofCoffea arabicais anything but straightforward, but Koehler confidently leads readers along that winding path, taking relevant detours to reveal the bean's rich history, dedicated stewards, rise to fame, and precarious future . . . Koehler closes his flavorful history on a hopeful note, ultimately transforming this seemingly pedestrian bean into something much more magical.
Well-researched . . . a mix of evocative descriptions and a scholar's eye for detail.
Koehler's account of Kafa's history is a yarn to rival anything from H. Rider Haggard... his history is as stimulating as the superior caffeine he describes.