Culture

Well-known Coffee Museums – History for Coffee Lovers

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A coffee in the morning drives away sorrow and worry. But have you ever dealt with the subject of “coffee” in more detail? You can get a first impression in our “Life of a coffee bean”. Would you also like to engage physically with your favorite beverage? Then visit a coffee museum. Here you come into contact with coffee in the most diverse variations and stages – not only with the coffee powder for the espresso coffee machine. Of course, there are also various types of filter coffee machines and French press coffee makers to admire. We have listed the most famous museums in different countries for you. No matter which museum you visit, you will enter a world all of your own. We wish you a lot of fun.

Germany

The Burg roastery and its coffee museum are located in Hamburg’s warehouse district. The current premises of the museum with its espresso coffee machines and French press coffee makers used to serve as a coffee store. Visitors can explore the history of coffee in the museum – from cultivation to the cup.

Various preparation methods – filter coffee machine, fully automatic machine, espresso maker – are explained. Old billboards and coffee cans transport visitors to another time. Of course there is also the possibility to taste the coffee.

The coffee house Coffe Baum in Leipzig comprises a restaurant, various parlors, a café room and a coffee museum on four floors. The café room combines an Arabic café, a Viennese café and a French café. The exhibition rooms of the museum are located on the third floor of the coffee house. More than 500 exhibits from the history of coffee offer visitors an insight into the fascination of this hot drink. How was coffee prepared before there was a filter coffee machine? These and many other questions are answered here.

Switzerland

The coffee museum of the Swiss coffee roasting company Chicco d’Oro is located directly at the company headquarters in Belerna. The company offers a broad portfolio of coffee quality products. The museum houses exhibits from the 18th century to the present day and combines the history of the company and that of the coffee.

Historical panels guide you through the various processing methods and explain the different preparation options, such as using the French Press coffee maker. Visitors can experience the changes in coffee production and processing up close.

The Caferama is the in-house coffee museum of the Cafè Badilatti in Zuoz (near St. Moritz). The museum covers the history of coffee. But it also takes a look at the people behind the coffee cultivation and processing. Numerous exhibits – old coffee grinders, Jebenas, espresso coffee machines, French press coffee makers and much more – can be admired. At the end there is freshly roasted coffee to taste and if you like, you can buy the coffee products from the café.

Italy

Omkafe is a family run coffee roastery in Arco. In its own coffee museum, guests can travel through the history of coffee. Information about the production and roasting of different eras shows the importance of coffee. In addition to ancient traditions, the history of the company is also presented.

Various coffee machines, e.g. one of the first espresso coffee machines and filter coffee machines, invite you to take a tour.

United Arab Emirates

Anyone in Dubai can visit the Coffee Museum – entry is free. Various demonstrations of regional and international preparation methods show the diversity of coffee. There is also a library with numerous books on the subject of coffee and a gift shop. Furthermore, the rooms show a large collection of different coffee grinders, coffee pots, espresso coffee machines and other coffee accessories.

Japan

The UCC Coffee Museum in Kobe deals with the topics “History, cultivation, processing, roasting, preparation and culture of coffee” in 6 exhibition rooms. Changing monthly themes explain various aspects to visitors, for example the importance of the degree of grinding. UCC is a coffee company that performs every single aspect within the coffee production chain.

The company grows coffee on its own farms, harvests it, exports it, roasts it and sells it. The entire value chain, including a coffee tasting, is therefore reproduced in the coffee museum.

Brazil

The Santos Coffee Museum is located in the former coffee exchange in the historic center. The building alone tells a lot about the coffee trade. A great deal of attention is paid to the historical and cultural significance of coffee cultivation for Brazil. A wide range of photos, drawings, antique harvesters and more take visitors back to a time before modern espresso coffee machines existed. A cafeteria then provides visitors with aromatic coffee specialties.

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