A tale of two coffee stories

Ripe coffee beans in farmer's hnads

Quite by coincidence, I listened to two podcasts about coffee back to back. Well, it wasn’t truly a coincidence; I saw that there were two in my queue and so I interfered with the ordering to listen to them one after the other. Anyway, Benjamen Walker’s Wake up and smell the coffee was the kind of podcast I wish I could do more often.[1] Benjamen took his growing love for coffee on a global tour of discovery that took in Paris, Copenhagen and Nairobi. I don’t know whether he planned it that way, or simply took advantage of various opportunities (there was something in the credits about having received a grant to do it, so maybe it was planned as a whole.) The result was an entertaining, complex episode that exposed parts of the coffee chain that even coffee fans might not know about.

Perhaps the most telling point was made by one of the founders of Coffee Collective, in Denmark, who explained that because in the past most coffee had been produced by enslaved labour, the cost of coffee barely reflected the cost of production. That cheapness created a culture that happily tips down the drain coffee that has sat neglected too long. You wouldn’t do that with a glass or two of wine left in a bottle (although you might feed it to your vinegar mother). The historically low price of coffee is probably what also causes right-thinking people to blanch at the thought of a $15 shot.

Slave-grown coffee also came up towards the end of Lord Bragg’s sleepwalk through an episode of In Our Time on coffee. In fact, it may even have come up only during the podcast listeners’ special treat of bonus material from Melvin and his guests. It wasn’t the only interesting thing to arise late and, in my view, much too briefly. There was also the foundations of Italian coffee culture, which mandated a top price for a coffee but only if it came without service. Standing at the bar and gulping a tiny espresso was thus cheaper than paying a lot more to linger at a table. In Italy, and in France too, the sale of coffee went to the guilds that also sold distilled spirits, which explains a lot.[2] The stove-top Moka coffee maker, launched in the 1930s and still a classic icon of Italian coffee at home, became popular partly because it made a reasonable facsimile of an espresso at home, and also because it was it was futuristic, modern, and made of aluminium.

Then there are the huge differences between Italian coffee culture and the “Italian” coffee bars in London in the 50s and 60s, where patrons did linger and where the coffee was mostly milk, as it remains in so many places today. Class and coffee is a ripe area for discussion. Starbucks, apparently, was popular in blue states 20 years before it began to make inroads in red states. In that context, and the cappuccino-sipping Guardian reader, another guest raised the milkiness of caffé latte and its kin as infantilising, people walking down the street and “sucking on their sippy cups”.

Coffee producers don’t drink coffee, just as cacao farmers don’t eat chocolate. Preparation is too much of a fuss, for one thing, and for another some countries outright banned coffee roasting; beans had to go for export. (Benjamen Walker’s interview with the first coffee roasters in Kenya was eye-opening.) Now farmers are leaving the land, in part because they cannot earn enough growing coffee, and moving to the city, where they encounter, and drink, instant coffee. Coffee remains a mostly urban drink, and as urbanisation increases in the developing world, so does coffee consumption.

What I’m saying, I guess, is that the guests on In Our Time seemed to have much more interesting information to offer than the same old stories of frisky goats, the growth of Lloyds List and invention of The Tatler and The Spectator. Perhaps I know too much, but I do think I have learned a lesson listening to those two podcasts together.

What that is, I’m not yet ready to say.

Syndicated from the mothership
Photo by Rodrigo Flores on Unsplash


  1. I have, in fact, made a similar episode: Pushing good coffee.  ↩

  2. Caffé corretto remains one of my favourite examples of Italian hypochondria and pragmatism. I did not, however, know that the fascists had outlawed espresso machines because coffee was luxurious and an import.  ↩

Cow sharing in the European Alps A new twist on community supported agriculture

Cow on a steep mountain slope

Cow decorated with flowers Well-connected urbanites have become very familiar with aspects of the sharing economy. Why own a car, when you can share someone else’s, complete with driver? In the right places, you can even share power tools that would otherwise spend most of their lives asleep in someone’s tool chest. True sharing is not quite the same as the gig economy, where in essence you are buying a tiny slice of someone’s time to deliver your pizza, walk your dog or assemble your flat-pack furniture, although the two are used somewhat interchangeably. But while the sharing economy would, at first glance, seem to be a feature of city life, it has in fact long been vitally important in the country. Farmers have always depended on their neighbours to help with physical work and, often, to share machinery in a variety of ways. Then there’s community supported agriculture, in which people, usually city dwellers, pay in advance for a share in the produce from a market garden or farm.

Cow-sharing agriculture is a new twist on CSA that is spreading through the European Alpine region. There are now around 60 cow-sharing schemes available online, and a recent paper by Katharina Gugerell and her colleagues looked into the similarities and differences among them, asking “What are participants of cow sharing arrangements actually sharing?”

Notes

  1. The paper is behind a paywall. If you look hard you may be able to find a copy
  2. The alphorn and vocal music at the start and end of the episode were from Swiss Alpine Music.
  3. I may be guilty of over-romanticising the whole thing with my selection of images, all of which are from Flickr. So, thanks to peter barwick, peter barwick, Jonas Löwgren, perkins_barbara and Robert J Heath.

Eat This Newsletter 114 Wring out the old

Pasta Grannies Every family should have one

five pasta grannies

vicky bennison
Vicky Bennison
It’s a kind of family fantasy. Each week, a kindly, twinkling grannie creates pasta by hand, making it look as easy as falling off a log. Her hands work unsupervised; kneading, stretching, pinching, rolling, the myriad shapes emerging, perfect. There’s cheesy music, and just enough information to give the impression that you too could do it. Welcome to the world of Pasta Grannies, a YouTube Channel that provides almost half a million subscribers with a regular dose of nostalgia and good eating.

Pasta Grannies is the brainchild of Vicky Bennison, although she would be the first to admit that it is the grannies that make it the success it has become. And now there’s a book, with proper recipes and instructions for those of us without a handy grannie. Vicky was kind enough to find a slot in her busy schedule to chat about pasta and grannies.

Notes

  1. Pasta Grannies: The Official Cookbook: The Secrets of Italy’s Best Home Cooks is the book of the channel.
  2. There’s nothing better than having someone show you how to shape the pasta, but you can also start by watching a video. Three that don’t need rolling out: cavatelli, orecchiete and trofie.
  3. Photos of the grannies from Vicky Bennison; thanks.
  4. And, in case you missed it, Ken Albala’s 1000 days of noodle soup.

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Eat This Newsletter 113 Plenty

  1. Pizza Hut and perestroika
  2. Resurrecting the tea Soviet Russia ruined
  3. Dutch farmers take to the beaches and defer the day of nitrogen reckoning
  4. Lamb-a-bam-a-ding-dong about what exactly “Spring” means to the average American
  5. On the one hand, “totalitarianism is bread in exchange for freedom”. On the other, democracy says “give up bread for freedom”. The plot against brown bread
  6. Can Babies Learn to Love Vegetables? from The New Yorker’s Food Issue

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