• Home
  • Archives
  • Contact
  • Gallery
  • Links
  • Sitemap
Subscribe: Posts | Comments | E-mail
  • Arts & LettersCaffeinated commentary
  • CoffeeO, dark impenetrable nectar
  • Coffee ReviewsMy coffee can beat up your coffee
  • Life in VermontA state of mind.
  • Original FictionWriting beyond the blog.

Bloggle

Posted on June 25, 2004 - by deCadmus

Coffee History Series: The Legend of Kaldi

Coffee

Once upon a time, in a faraway land called Ethiopia — or maybe Abyssinia, it was a very long time ago, after all — there lived a young goatherd named Kaldi. By all accounts [and there are many, as the story has been retold many, many times] Kaldi was a very responsible young man, and not one to do foolish things.

Every day Kaldi would set his goats to grazing in the hills that surrounded his village, and every evening his loyal goats would return home. This, of course, would suggest that the goats were the responsible parties. How foolish is it, after all, to just turn your goats loose into the hills every morning? But, back to our story…

One evening, Kaldi’s goats did not return home. The young man, no doubt feeling a little foolish by now, searched for his herd all through the night, and as morning broke he found them, leaping and dancing with reckless abandon and apparent glee round a stand of shiny, dark-leafed shrubs with bright red berries. Kaldi took in the scene before him, amazed. He soon decided it must be the berries that caused such reckless behavior in his otherwise responsible goats, and — forgetting everything his mother told him about eating strange foods from strange places — Kaldi sampled the berries, himself. In no time, he too was dancing gleefully with his goats around the green-leafed shrubs.

Soon, we are told, a wise and learned man passed by — an imam, or monk — trudging sleepily on his way to prayer. The imam rubbed his eyes and took in the scene before him — Kaldi and his goats — dancing gleefully about a stand of shiny, dark-leafed shrubs with bright red berries.

Being both a curious and learned man, the imam gathered some of these berries, himself, and on returning home he studied them. In his experiments with the bright red berries, he roasted them, boiled them and sampled the resulting beverage. He shared what he found with the rest of his fellow monks, and soon none fell asleep at prayers! And so coffee spread from place to place, creating a more gleeful, and wakeful, world.

So what of Kaldi? Perhaps he and his goats are dancing, still.

This entry was posted on Friday, June 25th, 2004 at 4:16 pm and is filed under Coffee. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

1 Comment

We'd love to hear yours!



  1. Visit My Website

    July 14, 2007

    Permalink

    Bloggle » From the Bloggle Archives: The Legend of Kaldi said:

    [...] where new posts should be, here’s a classic from the Bloggle’s Coffee History Series: The Legend of Kaldi [...]



Leave a Comment

Here's your chance to speak.

  1. Name (required)

    Mail (required)

    Website

    Message

  • Hello.

    Your author.Bloggle is the online playground of Doug Cadmus, a usability guy, writer, photographer and sometime dramatist who moved to Vermont for the coffee. When not writing, reading or walking his old, blind golden retriever, he roasts coffee in his garage and is the Web Guy for Green Mountain Coffee in Waterbury, VT.
  • Currently...

    • Don't forget: flu shot! (I get mine on Thursday.) 4 hours ago
    • Doh! Coming soon... "Fun with Heart Rate Monitors," or, "How to give yourself a workout you wouldn't wish on Michael Phelps." 2008/11/08
    • I hate grooved pavement. Really. But it sure does have a way of waking ya up first thing in the morning. Motorcycles use caution, yeah. 2008/11/06
    • I think it's entirely possible now that I might experience one of the United States' few *great* presidents in my lifetime. Happiness. 2008/11/04
  • Words, words, words.

    Bloggle Bodum Brewing Caffeine Cappuccino Climate Change Clover Coffee Brewer Coffee History Coffee House Colombia Costa Rica Cupping Customer Experience Direct Trade Environment Espresso Ethiopia Fair Trade Global Climate Change Green Coffee Green Mountain Guatemala Health Intelligentsia Internet Kenya Keurig La Esmeralda Organic Coffee Peets Photos Politics Roasting Rwanda SCAA Single Cup Coffee Special Reserve Starbucks Stumptown Tasting Uganda Usability Vacuum Pot Writing

    WP Cumulus Flash tag cloud by Roy Tanck requires Flash Player 9 or better.

  • Flickr Photos

  • Featured

    • A Taste of Things to Come by deCadmus on November 11, 2008
    • Joy by deCadmus on November 5, 2008
    • Get Your Vote On by deCadmus on November 4, 2008
    • Hey… Nice pumpkins! by deCadmus on November 1, 2008
    • Ten thousand thousand fruit by deCadmus on October 25, 2008
  • Recent Comments

    • Sonja on Get Your Vote On
    • deCadmus on Get Your Vote On
    • deCadmus on Revealed: The New and Improved Keurig B70 Brewer
    • Scott on Revealed: The New and Improved Keurig B70 Brewer
    • Brian on Ten thousand thousand fruit
Bloggle © 2000-2008, deCadmus
A Jeezum Crow Production. Munin