eArticleSubmit.com | Getting the Maximum Search engine Exposure to your Content
Translate Page To German Tranlate Page To Spanish Translate Page To French Translate Page To Italian Translate Page To Japanese Translate Page To Korean Translate Page To Portuguese Translate Page To Chinese

  Number of Times Read : 32

category

select Advice (1176)
select Aging (299)
select Arts and Entertainment (6308)
select Automotive (1911)
select Break-up (78)
select Business (27081)
select Business Management (1258)
select Cancer Survival (81)
select Career (3034)
select Cars and Trucks (2501)
select Celebrities (54)
select Cheating (49)
select Communications (552)
select Computers (2931)
select Computers and Technology (3234)
select Culture (288)
select Culture and Society (10617)
select Disease & Illness (1395)
select Environment (816)
select Etiquette (42)
select Family Concerns (1173)
select Fashion (2644)
select Finance (15353)
select Finances (6019)
select Food & Beverage (702)
select Food and Drinks (844)
select Health & Fitness (11826)
select Hobbies (3510)
select Home & Family (6797)
select Home Management (4409)
select Inspirational (1)
select Internet (4740)
select Internet Business (8959)
select Jobs (446)
select Medical Business (550)
select Medicines and Remedies (3007)
select Opinions (224)
select Pets & Animals (208)
select Politics (439)
select Product Reviews (62)
select Recreation (2118)
select Recreation & Sports (11794)
select Reference & Education (4938)
select Relationships (1555)
select Religion (1146)
select Self Help (2222)
select Self Improvement (1414)
select Short Stories (30)
select Society (1704)
select Travel & Leisure (3624)
select Vehicles (475)
select Wellness, Fitness and Di (5480)
select Womens Interest (1690)
select Womens Issues (237)
select World Affairs (175)
select Writing & Speaking (1614)
 
Stats
Total Articles: 175941
Total Authors: 9942
Total Downloads: 1409732


Welcome to Our Newest Member
amanda wilson
 


Information On The Ethiopian Coffee Ceremony
[Valid RSS feed]  Category Rss Feed - http://www.earticlesubmit.com/rss.php?rss=382
By : Ruca Martin    29 or more times read
Submitted 2008-01-24 00:38:36
The Ethiopian coffee ceremony is very important in the Ethiopian culture. The coffee ceremony will be performed when friends visit, during celebrations, or simply as a part of the daily routine. It is so important to how the Ethiopians view coffee that most Ethiopian restaurants will have the coffee ceremony performed for you at your table.

The Ethiopian coffee ritual takes the participants through the entire coffee preparation process. Whether you are witnessing the ritual in a restaurant or lucky enough to participate in someone’s home, the green coffee beans will be brought to your table by a woman. She will wash the beans, and then start a fire in a small open roasting furnace.

The washed beans will be put into a small pan with a long handle and held over the fire. The woman preparing the beans will shake the pan back and forth, like an old-fashioned popcorn maker. This keeps the bean from burning. Some people have described the sound of the shaking beans as similar to shaking coins in a tin can. Once the beans are roasted, the preparer takes the pan and walks around the room, filling the room with the enticing aroma of freshly roasted coffee. Experiencing the sounds and smells is an important part of the ritual.

The next step in the Ethiopian coffee ceremony is to grind the freshly roasted beans. In restaurants, they may use an electric grinder to speed up the process. Traditionally, the beans will be ground in a small tool called a mukecha (pronounced moo-key-cha). The mukecha is a very heavy wooden bowl. The beans are poured inside, and then crushed with a zenezena, which is a wooden or metal stick that is used in an up and down motion, rather like a mortar and pestle.

The ground coffee is then put into a traditional clay pot called a jebena (pronounced jay-ben-ah). Water is added, and then the pot is put over heat until the coffee boils. The scent of the boiling coffee again fills the room, tempting the senses of all the participants of the ritual.

Coffee prepared in the Ethiopian coffee ritual is then served in small ceramic cups resembling the small cups you see in Chinese restaurants for tea. The cups are arranged on a tray very close together, and the coffee is poured from one cup to another in a single pour from the pot. This is a very important step, even if some sloshes onto the tray. If the server poured each cup individually, the coffee grounds would get mixed up with the liquid, resulting in gritty coffee. With the single pour method, the coffee remains free of the sediment.

Once you’ve taken your first sip, you’ve witnessed the full life-cycle of making coffee, from washing the raw beans, through roasting, grinding, and boiling the coffee. If you’re in a restaurant, the ceremony usually ends here. Traditionally, second and third servings are often prepared as well. Each serving has its own name: the first serving is called Abol, the second serving is called Huletegna, and the third serving is called Bereka. Once you’ve reached this stage, you have completed the Ethiopian coffee ceremony.
Author Resource:- http://www.factsoncoffee.com
Article From eArticles
Can't find what you're looking for? Try Google Search!
Custom Search
Social Bookmark this Article
Related Articles :

HTML Ready Article. Click on the "Copy" button to copy into your clipboard.




Firefox users please select/copy/paste as usual
Sign up
learn more
 
 
Directory Menu
Home
Login
Submit Articles
Submission Guidelines
Top Articles
Link Directory
About Us
Contact Us
Privacy Policy
RSS Feeds
Navigation Menu
select
Mortgage Accelerator Scam!
select
Electricity Bill Killer!
select
Forex Secret Code
select
The Fortune Key
select
Law of Attraction Workbook!
select
Six Figure Yearly
select
Easy Automated Income
select
Top Secret Ad Secret
select
Build Muscle&Burn Fat
select
Run Car on Water!
select
Xbox360 3Redlights fix!

Actions
Print This Article
Add To Favorites




 
 

 

Powered By: Article Friendly | Design By Dynamic web solutions

eXTReMe Tracker