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Coffee : From Bean to Barista - Robert W. Thurston

Coffee

From Bean to Barista

By: Robert W. Thurston

eText | 8 October 2018 | Edition Number 1

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This engaging guide traces the history, cultivation, and culture of coffee, as well as the major factors influencing the industry today. Robert Thurston provides a readable, concise overview of coffee from the time the seeds of the coffee fruit are planted to the latest ideas in roasting and making beverages. He considers cultivation and its challenges, especially climate change; new research on hybridization; the history of coffee and cultural change surrounding it around the world; devices, new and old, for making coffee drinks; the issue of organic versus conventional agriculture; and the health benefits of the brew. The first book that coffee lovers naturally will turn to, it will also appeal to anyone interested in globalization, climate change, and social justice.

Industry Reviews
https://www.publishersweekly.com/9781538108086



Coffee: From Bean to Barista

Robert W. Thurston. Rowman & Littlefield, $29.95 (192p) ISBN 978-1-5381-0808-6



Thurston, professor emeritus of history at Miami University and managing partner at Oxford Coffee Company, pours out a rich history of the coffee industry. Thurston argues that coffee is the most important tropical agricultural product traded in the world, and notes that there are at least 50 million coffee farm workers on the planet. He explores the history of coffee (the earliest written reference to the beverage was found in a 1497 letter from the Sinai Peninsula), growing conditions in each significant coffee-producing region, and the difficulties of growing coffee organically. He also covers such intriguing asides as the process of intestinal fermentation, in which animals digest and excrete coffee cherries (the product of which commands up to $300 a pound). He offers insights into grinding beans for espresso (it should be “the consistency of fine sand”), and traces the meanings of terms commonly associated with coffee, such as espresso (which originally meant “quick service” and came to refer to a type of coffee in 1947 Italy thanks to the Gaggia machine) and barista (which Mussolini is said to have coined). Thurston encourages coffee lovers to buy good-quality whole beans and grind them at home, and to buy “fair trade” coffee so more money makes its way to the farmers. Thurston’s sophisticated guide to coffee’s history, cultivation, and enjoyment will more than satisfy coffee aficionados. (Oct.)
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