The Three-Coffee Ritual That Fuels A Nation's Daily Grind
The Guardian Weekly|May 03, 2024
500k Tonnes of coffee beans produced each year by Ethiopian farmers
Fred Harter
The Three-Coffee Ritual That Fuels A Nation's Daily Grind

25% Proportion of the population who are employed in the industry

Drinking coffee takes time in Ethiopia, a nation of caffeine lovers. In her village in Kafa, Ethiopia's coffee heartland, Hagre Bekele starts by roasting the raw green beans over an open fire. Then she grinds them by hand and brews them in a jebena, a bulbous, long-necked clay pot. The drink is ready when the coffee boils and almost overflows.

Her son, Abraham, serves the drink in small cups, filled to the brim, alongside thick chunks of bread and handfuls of roasted grains, a snack called kolo. When the first cup is drunk, Hagre brews the grounds twice more. It is considered rude not to offer three cups. She also burns incense: its aroma enhances the coffee's taste, and some believe it keeps bad spirits away.

The process lasts about an hour. To make things more efficient, and to ensure they get a caffeine fix throughout the day, Hagre shares brewing duties with her neighbours. Hagre is in charge of the lunchtime coffee, while her neighbour, Woynitu Gebre, takes care of the morning round. In the evening, everyone goes to Hagre's mother-in-law's. It is a system they have had in place for decades and one replicated, in various forms, in millions of homes every day across Ethiopia.

This story is from the May 03, 2024 edition of The Guardian Weekly.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.

This story is from the May 03, 2024 edition of The Guardian Weekly.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.

MORE STORIES FROM THE GUARDIAN WEEKLYView All
'Pretendians' Controversy Over Formerly Unheard-Of First Nation
The Guardian Weekly

'Pretendians' Controversy Over Formerly Unheard-Of First Nation

Local chiefs claim Kawartha Lakes group is part of wave of cases in which people falsely claim Indigenous identity

time-read
5 mins  |
May 17, 2024
This Is The Emptying Of Rafah
The Guardian Weekly

This Is The Emptying Of Rafah

Thousands of displaced Gazans are on the move again, packing their lives into carts and pickup trucks, as Israel's campaign against Hamas rages on

time-read
5 mins  |
May 17, 2024
Vast Online Scam Dupes Thousands Of Shoppers
The Guardian Weekly

Vast Online Scam Dupes Thousands Of Shoppers

More than 800,000 people in Europe and the US appear to have been duped into sharing card details and other sensitive personal data with a vast network of fake online designer shops apparently operated from China.

time-read
3 mins  |
May 17, 2024
Why Didn't Netflix Do More To Avoid The Baby Reindeer Furore?
The Guardian Weekly

Why Didn't Netflix Do More To Avoid The Baby Reindeer Furore?

What will happen next in the Baby Reindeer saga? Probably one or more bad things.

time-read
3 mins  |
May 17, 2024
Picture this
The Guardian Weekly

Picture this

From the galleries and squats of the 90s London art world to the riches of Covid-era New York, a tale of reunion, fame and fallout

time-read
3 mins  |
May 17, 2024
Hit and miss Goths, glory and plenty of gimmicks
The Guardian Weekly

Hit and miss Goths, glory and plenty of gimmicks

It was the most politically charged Eurovision song contest in memory-but it was won by a famously neutral nation. As the glittery dust settles from Saturday night in Malmö, Sweden, here's what we learned

time-read
4 mins  |
May 17, 2024
Rose Boyt, daughter of the artist Lucian Freud, sat for her father three times.Now 65, she has written a remarkable memoir based on diaries she kept while being painted
The Guardian Weekly

Rose Boyt, daughter of the artist Lucian Freud, sat for her father three times.Now 65, she has written a remarkable memoir based on diaries she kept while being painted

ROSE BOYT'S MEMOIR, Naked Portrait, is, in the narrowest sense, her account of sitting for three paintings for her father, Lucian Freud.

time-read
10+ mins  |
May 17, 2024
A failure to reckon fully with the Troubles fuels distrust and discord
The Guardian Weekly

A failure to reckon fully with the Troubles fuels distrust and discord

Fifty years ago, on 17 May 1974, my father, a bus conductor, was out on strike.

time-read
3 mins  |
May 17, 2024
Believe it or not
The Guardian Weekly

Believe it or not

Raffaella Spone was accused of faking an incriminating video of teenage cheerleaders. She was arrested, outcast and subjected to death threats. The problem? The video wasn't fake after all. She talks for the first time about being the centre of a story that created headlines around the world, yet nothing was as it seemed...

time-read
10+ mins  |
May 17, 2024
'HOPELESS AND BROKEN', 'I WORRY ABOUT THE FUTURE MY CHILDREN ARE INHERITING', 'I AM SCARED I DON'T SEE HOW WE CAN GET OUT OF THIS MESS'
The Guardian Weekly

'HOPELESS AND BROKEN', 'I WORRY ABOUT THE FUTURE MY CHILDREN ARE INHERITING', 'I AM SCARED I DON'T SEE HOW WE CAN GET OUT OF THIS MESS'

We asked 380 climate scientists what they felt about the future.

time-read
10+ mins  |
May 17, 2024