Coffee is an important part of Brazilian culture, home to hundreds of coffee plantations and farms. Brought to Brazil around the late 1700s, it quickly became a popular resource for farmers. Many believe that coffee was smuggled in by the French Guiana’s governor’s wife, seduced by a Portuguese Colonel.
Once coffee took off as a high-volume crop in Brazil and other South American countries, they had tough competition to face in the market against Asia. Luckily for Brazilian farmers, an aggressive disease ravaged the coffee crops in Asia, and Brazil’s coffee production flourished. To this day, Brazil remains dominant in the coffee production industry.
When coffee was first introduced and farmed in Brazil, European settlers were mostly the ones drinking it. Throughout history, coffee became a part of Brazilian culture and still is today. Coffee farming is multi generational and an important trade for the country, providing thousands and thousands of pounds of coffee beans each year.
2022
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