Talk:Coffea

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[edit] Cappucino name

Someone else wrote:

Capucin Monks discovered the stimulating effects.

I don't know if this is true, however the name for the cappuccino drink probably derives from the similarity between the drink's appearance and the Capucin Monks' habit.

(The above looks like an old wives tale to me. --hajhouse)

It is: "cappuccino" means little hat (from whence the name of the Friars, whose habit has a little part of cloth for the head), but this is related with the upper beige cream, which is a sort of little hat put over a coffee. Other less elegant jokes refer to condoms, recalled as different... hats, so be aware that in Italy this word has two meanings.

[edit] Yield

16 tonnes per hectare seems very high compared to what I get on Google searches for "coffee tonnes hectare" or "coffee pounds acre". Most results are an order of magnitude lower. Maybe that figure refers to raw fruit and the usual way of quoting it is in tonnes of milled beans? --Michael Shields 18:43, 10 Nov 2003 (UTC)

[edit] History

Could somebody check the bits of coffee history in Pedro Páez and Talk:Battle of Vienna?

[edit] Drink vs plant

I'm confused by this page. Shouldn't it be talking about coffee as a drink, rather than a plant? And why doesn't it mention espresso, lattes, mocha, etc.? -Adrian.

IMHO this page ought to be named Coffee (plant) and there should also be a Coffee (drink) with Coffee being a disambig page. I promised my wife I wouldn't let Wikipedia be an infinite time sink at least until I get some other things out of the way, but maybe some day I can work on that. Cheers, ;Bear 17:22, 2004 Apr 14 (UTC)

Not sure it needs a disambig page because they are sort of the same thing. This deals mostly with the plant, all it needs is a link to Coffee (drink) and some info adding there. Some links for me or whoever creates such a page: Instant_coffee café Espresso Coffeehouse Drink

Since Coffee (drink) now exists, I've moved over the relevant chunks. Markalexander100 20:06, 23 Apr 2004 (UTC)

[edit] Espresso vs Expresso

Very interesting. Somebody put in an empty headline about "Espresso is the correct spelling, not expresso" and I was in the middle of commenting on that and then somebody else took it out. Here's my comment anyway:

I think "expresso" might be a good name for those little steam toys; my wife has one and insists on calling it her expresso machine, and since it's not a REAL espresso machine with a pump, I've thus far refrained from disabusing her of that pronunciation. ;Bear 21:24, 2004 Jun 16 (UTC)

[edit] export

I added a few words, correcting the part that was telling that coffee is produced on tropical countries for temperate countries. Thats not true. People in tropical countries also drink coffee. Actually Brazil is one of the biggest consummers of it. Dionisiofranca 10:22, 20 Nov 2004 (UTC)

[edit] Sorry to Bother

Would anyone be at all able to tell me how long coffee has been available in cup form? It's a long story. -- Nobody Important, Dec 3.

[edit] Move

I moved this page from "Coffee (plant)" to "Coffea" for several reasons. I believe this article was at the original page due to the "common name" rule. There are several problems: I do not believe "coffee plant" is more common than "Coffea". Secondly, common rule is adhered to to make a page easy to find - but this was disambiguated anyway! Thus, I moved it to a more common name that did not need disambiguation. --Oldak Quill 23:34, 3 Mar 2005 (UTC)

[edit] Second or third?

Coffee page says: "Coffee is the second most commonly traded commodity in the world, trailing only petroleum." Coffea page says: "In fact, coffee ranks third only to cocoa and oil in terms of legally-traded products worldwide." Seems like contradiction. Anyone able to support facts and to clear that? Ruziklan 18:36, 12 March 2006 (UTC)

I was confused about this as well. However, a look at some FAO documentation, [1] and [2], shows that in 1998-2000 there were 2.9 million tons of cocoa produced, compared with 6.7 million tons of coffee produced. This doesn't prove whether or not coffee is the second most traded commodity, but it seems certain that it doesn't trail after cocoa. The cocoa article appears to use the same figures. I'll change this article to conform to the coffee article's ranking, although it's unfortunate that there isn't a citation for that. — Asbestos | Talk (RFC) 16:28, 27 March 2006 (UTC)
I know I'm jumping in a little late here, but I just found this. It's neither, and this has been discussed before in a few places [3][4][5]. Coffee's perceived rank among world commodities is a fondly-held myth. The fact is, it changes every year, and to date no one has been able to provide a reliable source less than 20 years old. I'll (seriously) send a box of chocolates to anyone who finds a continually updated, non-OR secondary reliable source ranking the world's commodities.--Margareta 17:40, 1 August 2007 (UTC)

One important thing to remember about these type of statistics: often they do not say what their base unit is. What does that mean? Let me explain... If someone makes a statement like "coffee is the 3rd most traded commodity" that may or may not be true. In order for the comment to be meaningful it would require a base unit of measure. Example, are we talking about the total volume of trade in units of money ($US Dollars, Euro, Yen)? Or are we talking about the total volume of trade in units of weight (kilos, pounds. metric tons, etc.). Or are we talking about the total volume of trade in units of volume (cubic meters, bushels, barrels, etc.). So this means that one commodity might be more valuable than another. Still a third commodity might have higher density than another. So we can easily see how one commodity might have a larger total number of tons traded, but the total dollar figure might be greater for the other (Bananas versus Diamonds for example). I think the point here, is that the original person that makes a comment like this, simply means to say "it's a large amount". Beyond that, further data would be needed. 64.65.160.84 (talk) 21:56, 3 April 2008 (UTC)

I think the original comment used the words "most commonly traded". So really they might not be referring to total dollars, nor tons, nor bushels. They might be referring to to the total number of trade-transactions. i.e. every time someone purchases a cup of coffee anywhere in the world, it could potentially count as "trade". That would mean that, indeed, the number of coffee transactions... "it's a large amount". —Preceding unsigned comment added by 64.65.160.84 (talk) 22:09, 3 April 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Barako coffee

Can someone take a look at Barako coffee and make sure we're not being hoaxed by this "Phillipine liberica"? -- nae'blis 21:03, 22 August 2006 (UTC)