<h2><SPAN name="COFFEE_2" id="COFFEE_2"></SPAN>COFFEE.<br/> <span class="xx-smaller"><span style="font-weight:lighter;"> (<i>Coffea Arabica L.</i>)</span></span></h2>
<p class="ac">DR. ALBERT SCHNEIDER,<br/>
<span class="smaller">Northwestern University School of Pharmacy.</span></p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="verse">"Directly after coffee the band began to play."</div>
<div class="verse ar">—<i>Greville, Memoirs, June 5, 1831.</i></div>
</div></div>
<div class="p2">
<ANTIMG class="drop-cap" src="images/initial_c.jpg" width-obs="54" height-obs="70" alt="" /></div>
<p>COFFEE is the seed of a small
evergreen tree or shrub ranging
from 15 to 25 feet in height.
The branches are spreading or
even pendant with opposite short
petioled leaves, which are ovate,
smooth, leathery, and dark green.
The flowers are perfect, fragrant, occurring
in groups of from three to
seven in the axils of the leaves. The
corolla is white, the calyx green and
small. The ovary is green at first,
changing to yellowish, and finally to
deep red or purple at maturity. Each
ovary has two seeds, the so-called
coffee beans.</p>
<p>The coffee tree is a native of the
tropical parts of Africa, in Abyssinia
and the interior. The Arabians were
among the first to transport it to their
native country for the purposes of cultivation.
From Arabia it was soon
transplanted to other tropical countries.</p>
<p>The name coffee (<i>Kaffee</i>, Ger., <i>Cafféier</i>,
Fr.) was supposed to have been
derived from the Arabian word <i>Kahwah</i>
or <i>Cahuah</i>, which referred to the
drink made from the coffee beans as
well as to wines. It is now generally
believed that the word was derived
from Kaffa, a country of the Abyssinian
highlands where the plant grows
wild very abundantly.</p>
<p>From Kaffa the coffee plant found
its way into Persia about the year 875,
and still later into Turkey. According
to popular belief, the drink coffee was
the invention of the Sheik Omar in
1258. Others maintain that the drink
was not known until even a later
period. The mufti, Gemal Eddin of
Aden, made a trip to Persia in 1500,
where he learned the use of coffee as
a drink, and introduced it into his own
country for the special purpose of supplying
it to the dervishes to make
them more enduring in their prayers
and supplications. In 1511 coffee had
already become a popular drink in
Mecca. About this time Chair Beg,
the governor of Mecca, issued an edict
proclaiming coffee-drinking injurious
and making the use of coffee a crime
against the laws of the Koran. It was
prophesied that on the day of judgment
the faces of coffee drinkers would
be blacker than the pot in which the
coffee was made. As a result of this
crusade the coffee houses were closed;
the coffee plantations were destroyed,
and offenders were treated to the bastinade
or a reversed ride on a donkey.
The next governor of Mecca again
opened the coffee houses, and in 1534
Sultan Soliman opened the first coffee
houses in Constantinople, which were,
however, again closed by Sultan Murad
II., but not for long. In 1624 Venetian
merchants brought large quantities
of coffee into northern Italy. In
1632 there were 1,000 public coffee
houses in Cairo. In 1645 coffee-drinking
had already become very common
in southern Italy. A Greek named
Pasqua erected the first coffee house
in London (1652). Coffee houses appeared
in other cities in about the following
order: Marseilles, 1671; Paris,
1672; Vienna, 1683; Nürnberg and
Regensburg, 1686; Hamburg, 1687;
Stuttgart, 1712; Berlin, 1721. In 1674
the ladies of London petitioned the
government to suppress the coffee
houses. To discourage the use of
coffee it was maintained that the drink
was made from tar, soot, blood of Turks,
old shoes, old boots, etc.</p>
<p>These coffee houses were of great
significance, as may be gathered from
the rapidity with which they spread
and the general favor with which they
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</SPAN></span>
were received. They were visited, not
so much on account of the drink that
was dispensed there, but rather for the
purpose of discussing political situations;
they constituted the favorite
meeting-places for anarchists, revolutionaries,
and high-class criminals. At
times it even became necessary to
close them entirely in order to check
or suppress political intrigues or plottings
against the government. At the
present time the saloons take the place
of coffee houses in most countries, and
many of them are still the hotbeds of
anarchy and crime. In Turkey, where
alcoholic drinks are prohibited, coffee
houses have full swing.</p>
<p>The Dutch again seemed to have
been the first to attempt the cultivation
of the coffee plant. In 1650 they
succeeded in transplanting a few trees
from Mecca to Batavia. From 1680 to
1690 the island already had large plantations;
others were soon started in
Ceylon, Surinam, and the Sunda islands.
About 1713 Captain Desclieux
carried some plants to the French
possessions of the West Indies (Martinique).
It is reported that only a
single plant reached its destination
alive, which is the ancestor of the coffee
trees of the enormous plantations
of the West Indies and South America.</p>
<p>The plant thrives best in a loamy
soil in an average annual temperature
of about 27 degrees C., with considerable
moisture and shade. Most plantations
are at an elevation of 1,000 feet to 2,500
above the sea-level. In order to insure
larger yields and to make gathering
easier the trees of the South American
plantations are clipped so as to keep
their height at about 6 feet to 6.5 feet.
The yield begins with the third year
and continues increasingly up to the
twentieth year. The fruit matures at
all seasons, and is gathered about three
times each year. In Arabia, where the
trees are usually not clipped, and hence
comparatively large, the fruit is knocked
off by means of sticks. In the West
Indies and South America the red, not
fully matured fruit is picked by hand.
The outer hard shell (fruit coat, pericarp)
is removed by pressure, rolling,
and shaking. The beans are now ready
for the market.</p>
<p>All of the different varieties or kinds
of coffee found upon the market are
from two species of <i>Coffea</i>; namely, <i>C.
Arabica</i> and <i>C. Liberica</i>; the latter
yielding the Liberian coffee, which is
of excellent quality.</p>
<p>There are a number of so-called coffees
which are used as substitutes for
true coffee, of which the following are
the more important. California coffee
is the somewhat coffee-like fruit of
<i>Rhamnus Californica</i>. Crust coffee is a
drink resembling coffee in color, made
from roasted bread crusts steeped in
water. Mogdad or Negro coffee is the
roasted seeds of <i>Cassia occidentalis</i>,
which are used as a substitute for coffee,
though they contain no caffeine.
Swedish coffee is the seeds of <i>Astragalus
Boeticus</i> used as coffee, for which
purpose it is cultivated in parts of Germany
and Hungary. Wild coffee is a
name given to several plants native in
India, as <i>Faramea odoratissima</i>, <i>Eugenia
disticha</i>, and <i>Casearia laetioides</i>. Kentucky
coffee is a large leguminous tree
(<i>Gymnocladus Canadensis</i>) of which the
seeds (coffee nut) are used as a substitute
for coffee.</p>
<p>The coffee beans are roasted before
they are in suitable condition for use.
At first the green beans were used.
According to one story, a shepherd
noticed that some of his sheep ate the
fruit of the coffee tree, and, as a result,
became very frisky. Presuming that
the coffee beans were the cause, he
also ate of the beans and noted an exhilarating
effect. The use of the
roasted beans was said to have originated
in Holland. Roasting should be
done carefully in a closed vessel in
order to retain as much of the aroma
as possible. This process modifies the
beans very much; they change from
green or greenish to brown and dark
brown and become brittle; they lose
about 15 to 30 per cent. of their weight,
at the same time increasing in size
from 30 to 50 per cent. The aroma is
almost wholly produced by the roasting
process, but if continued too long
or done at too high a temperature the
aroma is again lost. The temperature
should be uniform and the beans
should be stirred continually. It
should also be remembered that not
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</SPAN></span>
all kinds or grades of coffee should be
roasted alike. In order to develop
the highest aroma, Mocha coffee
should be roasted until it becomes a
reddish yellow, and has lost 15 per
cent of its weight. Martinique coffee
should be roasted to a chestnut brown,
with a loss of 20 percent in weight;
Bourbon to a light bronze and a loss
in weight of 18 percent.</p>
<p>The various coffee drinks prepared
differ very widely in quality. This is
dependent upon the varying methods
employed in making them. The following
method is highly recommended.
It is advised to purchase a good quality
of the unroasted beans and proceed
as follows:</p>
<p>1. <i>Sorting Berries.</i>—Carefully remove
bad berries, dirt, husks, stones, and
other foreign matter usually present in
larger or smaller quantities.</p>
<p>2. <i>Roasting.</i>—Roast as indicated
above. Coat the hot beans with sugar
to retain the aromatic principles; cool
rapidly and keep in a dry place.</p>
<p>3. <i>Grinding.</i>—Grind fine just before
the coffee is to be made.</p>
<p>4. <i>Preparing the Coffee.</i>—Coffee is usually
made according to three methods;
by infiltration, by infusion, and by boiling.
Coffee by infiltration is made by
allowing boiling water to percolate
through the ground coffee. It is stated
that much of the aroma is lost by this
method. In the second process boiling
water is poured upon the ground
coffee and allowed to stand for some
time. This gives a highly aromatic but
comparatively weak coffee. In the
third process the coffee is boiled for
about five or ten minutes. This gives
a strong coffee, but much of the aroma
is lost. Since these methods do not
give an ideal coffee an eminent authority
recommends a fourth, as follows:
For three small cups of coffee take one
ounce of finely ground coffee. Place
three-fourths of this in the pot of boiling
water and boil for five or ten minutes;
then throw in the remaining one-fourth
and remove from the fire at once,
stirring for one minute. The first portion
of the coffee gives strength, the
second the flavor. It is not advisable
to filter the coffee as it is apt to modify
the aroma. Allow it to stand until
the grounds have settled.</p>
<p>Coffee is very frequently adulterated,
especially ground coffee. It is stated
that the beans have been adulterated
with artificial beans made of starch or of
clay. It is not uncommon to find pebbles
which have been added to increase
the weight. Most commonly the beans
are not carefully hulled and sorted so
that a considerable percentage of spoiled
beans and hulls are present. The coffee
plant seems to be quite susceptible
to the attacks of various pests. The
coffee blight is a microscopic fungus
(<i>Hemileia vastatrix</i>) very common in
Ceylon which has on several occasions
almost entirely destroyed the coffee
plantations. The coffee borer is the
larva of a coleopter (<i>Xylotrechus quadripes</i>)
which injures and destroys the trees
by boring into the wood. The pest is
most abundant in India, while another
borer (<i>Areocerus coffeæ</i>) is common in
South Africa. Another destructive
pest is the so-called coffee bug (<i>Lecanium
coffeæ</i>).</p>
<p>Ground coffee is adulterated with a
great variety of substances. The
roasted and ground roots of chicory
(<i>Cichorium intybus</i>), carrot (<i>Daucus carota</i>),
beet (<i>Beta vulgaris</i>), are very
much used. The rush nut (<i>Cyperus esculentus</i>),
and peanut are also used. A
large number of seeds are used for
adulterating purposes, as corn, barley,
oats, wheat, rye, and other cereals;
further, yellow flag, gray pea, milk
vetch, astragalus, hibiscus, holly, Spanish
broom, acorns, chestnuts, lupin, peas,
haricots, horse bean, sun flower, seeds of
gooseberry and grape. The seeds of
<i>Cassia occidentalis</i> known as "wild coffee"
are used as a substitute for coffee in
Dominica and are said to have a flavor
equal to that of true coffee. Sacca or
Sultan coffee consists of the husks of
the coffee berry, usually mixed with
coffee and said to improve its flavor.
In Sumatra an infusion is made of the
coffee leaves or the young twigs and
leaves. This is said to produce a refreshing
drink having the taste and
aroma of a mixture of coffee and tea.
Efforts have been made, especially in
England, to introduce leaf coffee with
but little success.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</SPAN></span></p>
<table class="sp2 mc w50 p2" title="COFFEE." summary="COFFEE.">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td colspan="3"><span class="ac w100 figcenter">
<SPAN name="i_030.jpg" id="i_030.jpg"> <ANTIMG style="width:100%"
src="images/i_030.jpg" width="463" height="600" alt="" /></SPAN></span>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="xx-smaller ac w30">FROM KŒHLER'S MEDICINAL-PFLANZEN.<br/>5-99</td>
<td class="x-smaller ac w40">COFFEE.</td>
<td class="xx-smaller ac w30"> </td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<div class="bq">
<p class="ac">DESCRIPTION OF PLATE.</p>
<p><i>A</i>, twig with flowers and immature fruit,
about natural size; 1, Corolla; 2, Stamens;
3, Style and stigma (pistil); 4, Ovary in
longitudinal section; 5 and 6, Coffee bean in
dorsal and ventral view; 7, Fruit in longitudinal
section; 8, Bean in transverse section;
9, Bean sectioned to show caulicle; 10,
Caulicle.</p>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>As already stated, most of the many
varieties of coffee upon the market are
obtained from one species, and are usually
classified according to the countries
from which they are shipped. The
following are the most important varieties:</p>
<ol class="c">
<li><i>African, or Ethiopian Coffee.</i>
<ol>
<li>Abyssinia.</li>
<li>Galla.</li>
<li>Kaffa.</li>
</ol>
</li>
<li><i>Arabian, Levant, or Mocha Coffee.</i>
<ol>
<li>Bohuri.</li>
<li>Sakki.</li>
<li>Salabi.</li>
</ol>
</li>
<li><i>Dutch Indian Coffee.</i>
<ol>
<li>Java.</li>
<li>Batavia.</li>
<li>Tscheribon.</li>
<li>Samarang.</li>
<li>Menado of the Celebes.</li>
<li>Dadep of the Celebes.</li>
<li>Sumatra.</li>
</ol>
</li>
<li><i>American Indian Coffee.</i>
<ol>
<li>Manila.</li>
<li>Cavita.</li>
<li>Laguna.</li>
<li>Batanges.</li>
<li>Mindanao.</li>
</ol>
</li>
<li><i>French Indian, or Bourbon Coffee.</i>
</li>
<li><i>English Indian Coffee.</i>
<ol>
<li>Nilgeri.</li>
<li>Madras.</li>
<li>Ceylon.
<ol class="d">
<li>Native.</li>
<li>Plantation.</li>
</ol>
</li>
</ol>
</li>
<li><i>West Indian and Central American Coffee.</i>
<ol>
<li>Cuba (Havana, Santiago.)</li>
<li>Jamaica.</li>
<li>Santa Lucia.</li>
<li>Trinidad.</li>
<li>Domingo.</li>
<li>Porto Rico.</li>
<li>Martinique.</li>
<li>Guadelupe.</li>
<li>Dominica.</li>
<li>Granada.</li>
<li>Costa Rica.</li>
<li>Guatemala, Nicaragua, Salvador.</li>
</ol>
</li>
<li><i>South American Coffee.</i>
<ol>
<li>Surinam.</li>
<li>Berbice, Demerara.</li>
<li>Venezuela, La Guayra, Caracas.</li>
<li>Puerto Cabello, or Coast Porto Rico.</li>
<li>Brazil.</li>
</ol>
</li>
</ol>
<p>Coffee owes its stimulating properties
to an alkaloid caffeine which occurs
in the beans as well as in other parts of
the plant. Caffeine also occurs in other
plants; it is the active principle in Guarana
and is perhaps identical with theine,
the active principle of tea. It is generally
believed that moderate coffee-drinking
is beneficial rather than otherwise. It
has ever been the favorite drink of
those actively engaged in intellectual
work. It has been tested and found
satisfactory as a stimulant for soldiers
on long or forced marches. Injurious
effects are due to excessively strong
coffee, or a long-continued use of coffee
which has been standing for some
time and which contains considerable
tannin. Caffeine has been found very
useful in hemicrania and various nervous
affections. It has also been recommended
in dropsy due to heart lesion.
Strong, black coffee is very valuable
in counteracting poisoning by
opium and its derivatives. Coffee will
also check vomiting. Strong coffee is
apt to develop various nervous troubles,
as palpitation of the heart, sleeplessness,
indigestion, trembling. According
to one authority, it is the
aromatic principle of coffee which
causes sleeplessness.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</SPAN></span></p>
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