Did the cocain become too expensive for Luxembourg so they started substituting it with coffee or what happened?
All of Norway is dehydrated.
Just trying to figure how I stack up… is that kilos of beans or kilos of brewed coffee?
Edit: (Greek living across the Atlantic) I’m averaging around 32oz(around 940ml) of drip coffee daily. I’d estimate that’s around 35-45 grams of grounds daily. Over a year I’m probably between 11 and 14 kilos of grounds, and I’m a pretty average consumer in my office, so these figures look pretty reasonable- except Luxembourg!
It’s not a good map. I can’t believe that more coffee is drunk in the Nordic countries than in exYugoslavia.
Bull, drinking coffee for 5 hours on the promenades is basically a national sport in Croatia.
Are you okay Luxembourg?
Can confirm, sweden is addicted to coffee.
Surprised about turkey though. Thought turkish coffee was a big deal.
I drink a pack of coffee (500g) in under week alone.
I might have a mild caffeine addiction.
What the fuck Luxembourg.
Suprising to see Turkey like that
When it says “kg per capita” do they mean coffee bean weight or brewed coffee weight? I can understand Albanian numbers if it was for brewed coffee, otherwise, this is map is BS. Coffee is our national pastime, take out the water from the calculation you cowards.
Coffee in the north is basically just coffee flavoured milk, while its the real thing (grounded coffee boiled in džezva on the stove) in the Balkans and perhaps other southern European countries, therefore consumption in kg is kinda misleading.
Would it also depend on the style of coffee people drink related to quantity? Like percolated coffee vs espresso
I’m one of those coffee snobs, with somewhat expensive manual grinders and multiple ways of preparing coffee. At 3 coffees per day and 12-14g of beans per coffee, it adds up to about 13kg of beans per year, which puts me slightly above the average finn and 4-5 times above romania and the country where I now live.
WHAT THE FUCK IS WRONG WITH YOU, LUXEMBOURG?!
Nordic countries claim to consume the most coffee, but actually do they just make coffee in an extremely inefficient way?
#TeamTea
Dags för en fika.
Shows that drinking a lot of coffee doesn’t make you discerning. I had the displeasure of drinking coffee im Sweden several times. It’s some disgusting dirty water. They drink much more coffee than France or Italy, where they do the real thing.
Seems about right, coffee is a special occasion treat for me, tea is the every day drink. I’m getting worried for Luxembourg, a land that never sleeps, they’ll be turning into vampires soon.
We can drink as much coffee or tee as we want for free at my workplace in Sweden. I don’t know if that is normal elsewhere.
Randomly I had a discussion about coffee drinking culture yesterday, and this map is a little old (2019) and I did found a map that I lost where I think was 2021, where norway was up on second place with 9.9, but 3 cups was average norway and Iceland, and Finland was average 4 cups. Me, a Norwegian do not drink coffee, but I feel like most people who i know here who do, do easily drink all between 4~7 cups a work day.
But any scandinavian who has been a child can relate to when there was a dinner party and you asked the grown ups if you could have some cake/sweets now, please~ the answer would *always* be “no, you have to wait for the coffee”.
My parents who love to travel to Italy has told about when they travel, they try order espresso or coffee late midday its seen as weird and too late for so by the waiters often
It’s ironic Turkey is one of the lowest consumers of coffee today since Europe acquired coffee beans in the 1600’s by chance by Austria-Hungarian Hapsburg troops from Ottoman army leftovers (the Ottomans got it from Ethiopia via their vast empire trade links who originally domesticated the coffee bean).
You can not compare coffee in Germany or Finland with one in Slovenia or Croatia. We are making so much stronger and more potent coffee..literally one ours is like 5 tipical cups of transparent muddy water you drink as a coffee…🙂….sorry..thats true.
Swedish people: love coffee. Also Swedish people: refuse to make good coffee 🙂
Would love to see a similar map for tea
Isn’t Turkey renowned for coffee, yet it has one of the lowest consumptions??
That’s crazy to me, I’d thought the Balkans and Turkey would have run away with this stat. I’m addicted to Turkish coffee and so just assumed, making an ass out of myself in the process.
kg of coffee beans or kg of prepared drink? If second then nothing unusual, Turkish coffee is very dense.
Swedish pharmacies:
Teeth whitening products *everywhere*
Turkey is only 0.9?? Something must ne wrong
I’m surprised by this, almost everyone I know is addicted. A coffee machine in the office I worked in had a statistic of how many coffees it made, it was like 30000 in a year. 30 people worked there…
I’m not contributing though
as a Greek, I don’t believe this chart, we drink more freddo espresso than we drink water
32 comments
Did the cocain become too expensive for Luxembourg so they started substituting it with coffee or what happened?
All of Norway is dehydrated.
Just trying to figure how I stack up… is that kilos of beans or kilos of brewed coffee?
Edit: (Greek living across the Atlantic) I’m averaging around 32oz(around 940ml) of drip coffee daily. I’d estimate that’s around 35-45 grams of grounds daily. Over a year I’m probably between 11 and 14 kilos of grounds, and I’m a pretty average consumer in my office, so these figures look pretty reasonable- except Luxembourg!
It’s not a good map. I can’t believe that more coffee is drunk in the Nordic countries than in exYugoslavia.
Bull, drinking coffee for 5 hours on the promenades is basically a national sport in Croatia.
Are you okay Luxembourg?
Can confirm, sweden is addicted to coffee.
Surprised about turkey though. Thought turkish coffee was a big deal.
I drink a pack of coffee (500g) in under week alone.
I might have a mild caffeine addiction.
What the fuck Luxembourg.
Suprising to see Turkey like that
When it says “kg per capita” do they mean coffee bean weight or brewed coffee weight? I can understand Albanian numbers if it was for brewed coffee, otherwise, this is map is BS. Coffee is our national pastime, take out the water from the calculation you cowards.
Coffee in the north is basically just coffee flavoured milk, while its the real thing (grounded coffee boiled in džezva on the stove) in the Balkans and perhaps other southern European countries, therefore consumption in kg is kinda misleading.
Would it also depend on the style of coffee people drink related to quantity? Like percolated coffee vs espresso
I’m one of those coffee snobs, with somewhat expensive manual grinders and multiple ways of preparing coffee. At 3 coffees per day and 12-14g of beans per coffee, it adds up to about 13kg of beans per year, which puts me slightly above the average finn and 4-5 times above romania and the country where I now live.
WHAT THE FUCK IS WRONG WITH YOU, LUXEMBOURG?!
Nordic countries claim to consume the most coffee, but actually do they just make coffee in an extremely inefficient way?
#TeamTea
Dags för en fika.
Shows that drinking a lot of coffee doesn’t make you discerning. I had the displeasure of drinking coffee im Sweden several times. It’s some disgusting dirty water. They drink much more coffee than France or Italy, where they do the real thing.
Seems about right, coffee is a special occasion treat for me, tea is the every day drink. I’m getting worried for Luxembourg, a land that never sleeps, they’ll be turning into vampires soon.
We can drink as much coffee or tee as we want for free at my workplace in Sweden. I don’t know if that is normal elsewhere.
Randomly I had a discussion about coffee drinking culture yesterday, and this map is a little old (2019) and I did found a map that I lost where I think was 2021, where norway was up on second place with 9.9, but 3 cups was average norway and Iceland, and Finland was average 4 cups. Me, a Norwegian do not drink coffee, but I feel like most people who i know here who do, do easily drink all between 4~7 cups a work day.
But any scandinavian who has been a child can relate to when there was a dinner party and you asked the grown ups if you could have some cake/sweets now, please~ the answer would *always* be “no, you have to wait for the coffee”.
My parents who love to travel to Italy has told about when they travel, they try order espresso or coffee late midday its seen as weird and too late for so by the waiters often
It’s ironic Turkey is one of the lowest consumers of coffee today since Europe acquired coffee beans in the 1600’s by chance by Austria-Hungarian Hapsburg troops from Ottoman army leftovers (the Ottomans got it from Ethiopia via their vast empire trade links who originally domesticated the coffee bean).
You can not compare coffee in Germany or Finland with one in Slovenia or Croatia. We are making so much stronger and more potent coffee..literally one ours is like 5 tipical cups of transparent muddy water you drink as a coffee…🙂….sorry..thats true.
Swedish people: love coffee. Also Swedish people: refuse to make good coffee 🙂
Would love to see a similar map for tea
Isn’t Turkey renowned for coffee, yet it has one of the lowest consumptions??
That’s crazy to me, I’d thought the Balkans and Turkey would have run away with this stat. I’m addicted to Turkish coffee and so just assumed, making an ass out of myself in the process.
kg of coffee beans or kg of prepared drink? If second then nothing unusual, Turkish coffee is very dense.
Swedish pharmacies:
Teeth whitening products *everywhere*
Turkey is only 0.9?? Something must ne wrong
I’m surprised by this, almost everyone I know is addicted. A coffee machine in the office I worked in had a statistic of how many coffees it made, it was like 30000 in a year. 30 people worked there…
I’m not contributing though
as a Greek, I don’t believe this chart, we drink more freddo espresso than we drink water