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6 votes
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When Oslo's first floating sauna was banned by port authorities, its owners took it on the run, sparking a public craze
7 votes -
Local coffee/tea cultures?
@cadadr's Turkey AMA coffee commentary got me curious about what coffee consumption and cultures look like among Tilders. If your principal national beverage is tea instead of coffee, feel free to...
@cadadr's Turkey AMA coffee commentary got me curious about what coffee consumption and cultures look like among Tilders.
If your principal national beverage is tea instead of coffee, feel free to comment on why you think that might have arisen.
I spent a bit of time chasing one of @cadadr's mentions about tasseomancy, and it's fascinating, so please describe if your coffee culture has any comparable rituals.
I grew up with my mother's Montreal Canadian coffee-drinking standards: starting around age 8 or so, a half-cup of stovetop percolated coffee with a half-cup of milk added, eventually graduating to full cups of strong black coffee by my teenage years. For most of my life, the commonest means of consuming coffee was via the Bunn restaurant coffee maker - a drip coffee maker with an electric burner that held the brew scalding hot, near-burnt.
The commonest U.S. home coffee preparation still uses a drip coffee maker. "Pod" coffee makers that use prefilled cartridges and a pressure boiler (lower pressure than espresso, but similar) are increasingly popular.
Practically all coffee in the U.S. is made from imported beans, with robust global supply chains. There's minimal boutique coffee production in the states of Hawaii and California, but the territory of Puerto Rico grows coffee for local use and premium export. Coffee is taxed at the same rates as other food products, and no import duties are levied, so it's incredibly cheap - usually $5 - 10 per 450g.
In the U.S., at least, there are now widespread corporate coffee shop chains - Starbucks, Peet's, Caribou, and others, which produce very standardized, uniform coffee, in pressure-expressed, brewed, and cold-process variations. They're often prepared with flavored syrups, and typically have dairy added, either as plain or steam-heated and frothed milk. Average cost for the fancier variations is around 5 USD, though a cup of plain brewed coffee is usually $1.50 - $2.00.
Even tiny villages have neighborhood coffee shops that serve plain brewed coffee and espresso drinks, teas, baked goods, and simple sandwiches. Local coffee roasters are relatively common, too. The coffee shops may feature their products, or the roaster may have its own cafe'. Most of the larger bookstores also serve coffee, teas, and espresso drinks in their own cafe's.
We usually drink our coffee relatively strong, around 10 - 15g of ground coffee per 200 ml of water for brewing, and dark roasts are preferred over mild ones.
Most U.S. cities support thriving international food and beverage cultures, so we get to try coffee variations from around the world. My personal favorites (aside from the obvious Italian espresso culture) are Turkish-style with cardamom, Ethiopian, and Cuban colada.
There isn't much of a national tea tradition here, though there's a common practice of herbal tisane use for health purposes.
I've visited around 43 of the 50 U.S. states and haven't noticed really distinctive regional variations, except for New Orleans chicory-flavored and New Mexico piñon-flavored coffee. My spouse adds chicory to coffee at home, and piñon coffee is delicious. We'll treat ourselves to shipments a couple of times a year. Hawaiian Kona variety beans are boutique-premium and there's some fakes, so we don't go out of our way to get it when fair-trade Ethiopian or Guatemalan varieties are better and cheaper. I try very hard not to think of the carbon footprint of any of this...
18 votes -
Icelandic government is interested in reclaiming Old Icelandic manuscripts from Denmark
3 votes -
Every year, Paris holds a Grand Prix to crown the city’s best baguette – and in recent years, the winners have been bakers whose ‘origins’ are far from France
6 votes -
Denmark has a national songbook – should it mention Ramadan?
7 votes -
Why I’ve stopped coming out to my mum
8 votes -
Sauna Day celebrates favourite Finnish pastime – over 1,000 public and private saunas throughout Finland open their doors
7 votes -
How the Goth pubs of Sweden transformed drinking in Scotland's industrial heartlands
8 votes -
Sweden's Disgusting Food Museum gets a permanent home – now housed in the Caroli shopping centre in Malmö
7 votes -
Notre-Dame came far closer to collapsing than people knew. This is how it was saved.
14 votes -
Independence National Park is an embarrassing mess. Why doesn’t anyone care?
6 votes -
How drag queens have sashayed their way through history
5 votes -
Here are hundreds more artists whose tapes were destroyed in the UMG fire
9 votes -
The surprising truth about Indian food
10 votes -
‘Bread is practically sacred’: how the taste of home sustained my refugee parents
6 votes -
How Japan copied American culture and made it better
7 votes -
American bull - The story of American beef is like the story of the nation as a whole: a mashup of history and myth, bloody and contested
6 votes -
Parsi cafes, a centuries-old tradition in India, are vanishing
4 votes -
Netflix’s ‘Street Food’ reveals a thriving and threatened culture
11 votes -
South Korean women 'escape the corset' and reject their country's beauty ideals
11 votes -
Learning my father’s language: I made a vow to teach myself Irish, the language my mother struggled to learn, so that my daughters may learn it too
6 votes -
Netflix’s wonderful Street Food focuses on the human aspect of ordinary food
6 votes -
100 years after genocide, Armenians in Turkey revive their identity
8 votes -
'It's amazing tatau's persisted': How Samoan tattooing withstood colonialism
6 votes -
Fireworks and pipe bombs: How Greek towns celebrate Easter
6 votes -
Every year on 'Día Del Mar,' Bolivia celebrates the coastline they lost
6 votes -
For South Asian cooks, yogurt starter is an heirloom
6 votes -
The Metropolitan Museum will return prized gilded coffin after learning it was stolen
5 votes -
The battle for the Boqueria
8 votes -
'This cuts across society': How singeli music went from Tanzania to the world
5 votes -
When Asian women are harassed for marrying non-Asian men
20 votes -
In northern Japan, orchardists harness the power of the sun to sear images of good fortune—and the occasional face of a celebrity—onto apples
6 votes -
The island that never stops apologising
7 votes -
How old is too old for trick-or-treating?
18 votes -
In Japan, the Kit Kat isn't just a chocolate. It's an obsession.
13 votes -
The oldest true stories in the world
6 votes -
The French town that throws wine in the sea
5 votes -
A history of Johannesburg in ten dishes. The dishes that explain the history of South Africa’s Gold Rush City.
7 votes -
A brief history of the Pansy Craze – the beginning of LGBTQ nightlife
1 vote -
The great Chinese art heist
9 votes -
The great Chinese art heist
7 votes -
Somali songs reveal why musical crate digging is a form of cultural archaeology
4 votes -
How to survive a twenty hour Basque breakfast
5 votes -
Japan’s vegetable-eating men - A nation of suit-wearing salarymen educates its first generation of stay-at-home dads
7 votes -
The King and I: Timeless classic or dated relic?
5 votes -
Pixar's dumpling short "Bao" is polarizing audiences with cultural themes
12 votes -
The eel trader reviving an old Amsterdam tradition
4 votes -
The rebellious French village making wine banned by the EU
3 votes -
The real Great Gatsby is a sandwich the size of a baby goat
5 votes