The most beautiful thing said about coffee
“I like my coffee like I like myself: strong, sweet, and too hot for you.” -Jac Vanek
“Science may never come up with a better office communication system than the coffee break.” -Earl Wilson
"I hope your coffee is stronger than any challenges you face today. But if not, remember: Don't throw your cup at anyone. You need it to refill." – Nanea Hoffman
“Do you know how helpless you feel if you have a whole cup of coffee in your hand and you start sneezing?” —Jean Kerr
The old name of coffee
However, he does not use the name “coffee” for the love or plant (products of the region), which is known in Arabic as “bun” and in Oromo (language) “bun” is pronounced fatha. The Semitic languages have the root “dark color,” which became a natural name for drinks.
What did poets say about coffee?
Coffee has received a share of flirtation in the poems and poems of great Arab poets. Some of them sang of the beauty of its taste, and others were passionate about its scent and fragrant aroma. The Arab poet Abu Nawas says, “O suitor of red-haired coffee... O its dowry by the pound... He takes from it a full load of gold. You have fallen short of the rafah... Beware of... You hear it, and the vineyard swears that it will not bear grapes,” and the poet Abu Tammam Al-Ta’i said about it: “And the coffee of its star blooms... musk and amber shine from it... rosy, urged by a young man... as if it were being squeezed from his cheek.”
