Coffee’s a part of our national brew
When you knew that it was over,
Were you suddenly aware
That the autumn leaves were turning
To the color of her hair?
In authoring Kapihan: A Celebration of Coffee in the
It seems that coffee is like fabric: you can tailor it according to your needs and resources, and for the requirements of the occasion. After more than two and a half centuries in the
There are many stories here, more than the book’s pages allowed for inclusion. One friend, an Atenista, told me how his immersion experience took him deep into the countryside. He stayed with a family of four for a number of days, sleeping on an outdoor bed, where “mutant mosquitoes on steroids” feasted on him at night. The family’s meals consisted of rice and the contents of one tin of corned beef that was made to last several days. With every meal, there was coffee to drink. To this family, coffee was an anchor of dignity.
Another friend shared a family story about a relative who had lived in
Single women told me how they preferred, when asked out on a first date, to be invited for coffee instead of dinner (possibility because there was less commitment involved). Single men confided how an offer of coffee could be made with feigned nonchalance (romantic exploration dressed as innocent imbibing: “Me? Have the hots for you? Nooo…”). For single men and women alike, coffee can serve as a test for interpersonal compatibility.
I came to appreciate how coffee dresses poor and rich alike, how it is an unquestioning companion to vice and virtue, and how it can be an ingredient for budding romance or multi-generational family gathering.
But it was after the book had been published and while the book launch was in full flow that my jumble of recollections crystallized into a humble appreciation of coffee’s own circle of life (I have three children, and yes, I have watched Disney’s The Lion King many, many times; the signature song rings in my ears to this day).
I realized that a cup of coffee begins with a decision: a farmer’s decision to plant a coffee tree. As with all such decisions, there are serious tradeoffs. “Why wait a few years before the first harvest of coffee beans, when another crop can provide marketable produce within a few months? What if yields don’t work out? What if the weather works against me? What if the market price drops?” It is a moment of risk, of faith and of courage. And when the harvest comes in, professionals get to work full-time on the trading, roasting, packaging and marketing of the finished product. And so I realized that to drink a cup of coffee is to enable a farmer with a high school education to send his children to college; that it allows thousands of professionals to make a living and build careers, and to send their children to college. I realized that in a cup of coffee there is courage, effort and mutual benefit.
The book project is now over, and I am so much more aware of the purposes of coffee, and its presence everywhere. My journey of discovery has ended for now. I wish you a good start to yours.
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Kapihan: A Celebration of Coffee in the