#128: Trouble Brewing

Published: May 8, 2020, 5:38 p.m.

Today, almost 90 percent of the world\u2019s population is hooked on coffee or its most addictive component, caffeine. But 500 years ago, hardly anyone drank it, and the story of how coffee came to grace so many breakfast tables, office kitchens, and factory breakrooms speaks volumes about the very unequal world we live in. Our guest this week is Augustine Sedgewick, whose new book, Coffeeland: One Man's Dark Empire and the Making of Our Favorite Drug, uses the global history of the Hill family, a coffee dynasty in El Salvador, to unravel how societies, rural and urban alike, were recast in the wake of the Industrial Revolution. Ultimately, that restructuring led to many of the inequalities we still see today between the global North that drinks coffee and the global South that farms it.


Go beyond the episode:


Commonplace Book, Celebrity Coffee Fan Edition:


  • \u201cWithout my morning coffee, I\u2019m just like a dried-up piece of goat\u201d\u2014J. S. Bach
  • \u201cI never laugh until I\u2019ve had my coffee\u201d\u2014Clark Gable
  • \u201cI would rather suffer with coffee than be senseless.\u201d\u2014Napoleon Bonaparte
  • \u201cCoffee: the favorite drink of the civilized world\u201d\u2014Thomas Jefferson
  • \u201cAs soon as coffee is in your stomach, there is a general commotion. Ideas begin to move ... similes arise, the paper is covered. Coffee is your ally and writing ceases to be a struggle.\u201d\u2014Honor\xe9 de Balzac
  • \u201cAmong the numerous luxuries of the table ... coffee may be considered as one of the most valuable. It excites cheerfulness without intoxication; and the pleasing flow of spirits which it occasions ... is never followed by sadness, languor or debility.\u201d\u2014Benjamin Franklin
  • \u201cCoffee, according to the women of Denmark, is to the body what the Word of the Lord is to the soul.\u201d\u2014Isak Dinesen
  • \u201cShould I kill myself, or have a cup of coffee?\u201d\u2014Albert Camus


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