Fun Coffee Recipies

On this Post we decided to search for fun recipes that are related to coffee.  Hopefully you will find something you like.

Please feel free to add your own coffee recipe in the comment section.

Free Coffee Recipes

Author: May Stewart

Coffee is one of the world’s most popular drinks and as the different coffee recipes. People from around the world have contributed their very own coffee recipes in which most of us are enjoying in our own choice of coffee shops.

These recipes are free and not hard to find. Here are several coffee recipes that you might find in you local coffee shops:

1. One of these recipes is white chocolate coffee- a hot chocolate made with white chocolate that is very smooth and relaxing.

2. Another is the Milky Way Cappuccino. If you love chocolate you’ll certainly love this espresso drink.

3. Thai iced coffee, a smooth recipe for an iced chai coffee. The spiciness for tea can also be used for coffee and it won’t take long to prepare. [Read more…]

Share

Recommendations So You Can Find An Excellent Chocolate Covered Coffee Beans

Recommendations So You Can Find An Excellent Chocolate Covered Coffee Beans

Author: Leslie Karren

Coffee and chocolate fanatics, alike, will love chocolate covered coffee beans. However, finding high quality products with just the right blend of coffee and chocolate is very hard to do. If you are searching for chocolate covered beans that will make your mouth water, this article will tell you how to find them.

There are no limits to the types of beans and chocolates available these days. You can now get coffee beans that are covered in dark, milk, or white chocolate. You can even find other flavors, including coffee flavored chocolate and orange flavored chocolate.

If you come across a large bag of incredibly inexpensive covered beans, you should be wary. Some brands do not cover their beans with real chocolate and they may also use poor quality beans. To be on the safe side, read the label and ingredients carefully. If you see phrases like chocolate flavored or coffee flavored, it most likely means that neither real chocolate or real coffee is being used.

Any time you are going to buy these beans, you should make sure that cocoa is one of the ingredients. When you see that cocoa is on the ingredient list, you know that real chocolate is being used. Also, if the beans are meant to be covered in dark chocolate, there should be no milk in the outer shell if the shell is made of true dark chocolate. [Read more…]

Share

The History of Coffee

The History of Coffee

Author: Alison Benjamin

Few drinks nowadays can claim such widespread popularity as coffee. Probably the most effective source of caffeine short of the new energy drinks currently being marketed, coffee is certainly popular in many different locations, from the home to the office, from small coffeehouses to swanky eating places.

The history of coffee can be tracked for just over a thousand years, a comparatively short period of time in comparison to alcoholic beverages, which have been drunk since prehistoric times, and tea, which dates back over a thousand years BC. Not surprisingly, coffee has spread around the world as a well-liked drink. A look at the history associated with coffee will show the way it has gained its acceptance.

Ethiopian Beginnings

The history of coffee as a drink developed in Ethiopia some time around the 9th century. Legend suggests that Ethiopian herders noticed that their goats were particularly perky after consuming the berries of a particular plant, and therefore had the idea to eat it as a stimulant. The fact is that coffee probably had already been developed as a drink by the ninth century as a natural consequence of cultivation connected with plants. From Ethiopia, the beverage spread to North Africa, including Egypt.

Popularity In The Middle East

The introduction of coffee to Egypt made it readily available at places with trade with the rest of the Middle East, where coffee became a popular beverage by the 1500s. Soon after its introduction, regulators placed a ban on the drink due to its stimulant attributes. But like prohibition in America, the ban on coffee did not survive and was eventually rescinded. At this time in history, though, tight controls on the commodity were in position. Although coffee in its roasted form began to be exported to Italy as well as other European nations, export of the unroasted coffee beans as well as plants was still banned.

Colonization and Coffee

This tight control over the export of coffee plants didn’t continue. This particular period of the history of coffee ended when Dutch merchants smuggled coffee seeds from the Middle East during the 1600s, where they were planted on the island of Java, which is still a major exporter of coffee in the present day and also shares its name with the nickname for the particular beverage. Oddly enough, as coffee plants spread to other European colonies, another century into the history associated with coffee, in the 1700s, the plants were smuggled to Brazil, which happens to be still the largest exporter of coffee beans. [Read more…]

Share

Do You Know About These Green Tea Health Benefits?

Green tea benefits the heart, the circulatory system, the brain, the metabolism, the digestive system and, because of its antioxidant content, all of the cells of the body. Are green tea health benefits overstated? In some cases, the answer is “yes”.

Green tea benefits were first examined because of something called the “Japanese paradox”. It’s a little like the French paradox. Most health experts believe that people who consume large amounts of dietary fat and/or smoke cigarettes are more likely to develop heart disease and cancer. But the incidence of heart disease is low in the French, even though the traditional diet is high in fat. The incidence of heart disease, as well as stomach and throat cancer is low in the Japanese, even among smokers.

After several studies, researchers stated that one of the possible green tea health benefits was a reduced risk of stomach and throat cancer, primarily because the study participants drank a liter or more of green tea every day. After studying French populations, researchers found an antioxidant in red wine called resveratrol. They said that the antioxidant may reduce the risk of heart disease, among other things.

If we combine green tea health benefits with those of resveratrol, we might be able to lengthen our life-spans. Researchers arrived at this conclusion after feeding resveratrol to fish that normally lived for only nine weeks. After dosing a group of the fish with resveratrol, they lived an average of 56% longer than the group that did not receive the supplement. Of course, whether it has the same effect on humans remains to be seen.

If you really want to lengthen your lifespan, you need more than antioxidants. They are a good place to start, because they fight free radical damage, but they do nothing to counter glycation, a complex process caused by sugar molecules binding to protein within the human body. This binding causes a cascade of reactions that lead to the formation of advance glycation end-products or AGEs. The term AGE is appropriate, because these molecules have been implicated in Alzheimer’s, type II diabetes, heart disease, deafness, blindness, cancer and other “age” related diseases. [Read more…]

Share