About the same time, coffee hit the Americas. By 1689, there were coffee houses in Boston -- the precursors of Starbucks, Dutch Bros, etc. -- though with a more limited fare on the menu. Two out of every three adults in the US start the day with coffee -- Americans consume about 400 million cups of coffee per day! It became so popular in the late 1770s that coffee replaced the daily rum ration for soldiers. Ever since our armies have run on coffee just like the industry. Nashville is home to one of the coffee dynasties -- the Maxwell House family brand. Folgers is known far and wide. At home the brand of choice seemed to be Butternut (is it even still around?). At every meeting of pastors, there is always a very large pot brewing (followed later in the day with some other libation!). In 1966, America got its first real coffee chain — Peet’s Coffee — starting life as a small storefront in Berkeley, California. There has been no looking back since.
I will admit to drinking a lot of coffee. From a better blend in the pod machine to French press to a big drip machine to my nostalgic favorite -- Swedish egg coffee, there is not much I do not like about coffee -- except for those drinks that are coffee in name only but really caffeinated milk shakes or such. I am not a fan. No cream, no sugar, no flavors from a bottle — just hot and black and strong. Alone or in a koffee klatch, every day begins with coffee. It is the one unchangeable part of my breakfast. I drink less now that I am retired but seldom less than two cups. I do love tea but not first thing in the morning. That prime place and time is reserved for a good cup of java. Indeed, I find it hard to image anything without the start of coffee. Staring into the deep brown steamy liquid seems to get my devotion started, my blog juices going, and whets my appetite for reading. If it is morning when you are reading this, I hope you are enjoying a great cup of coffee today.

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