If you’re a German, you won’t have coffee in front of you. Especially in France and Italy, Germans love this man a great, strong drink. 85 percent of Germans drink coffee every day, mostly on the spur of the moment.

The history of the educational adventure in Germany goes back around 450 years. In the 16th week, the first coffee powder was distributed at a crossroads in southern Germany. That summer, people in the city started enjoying coffee again by making the first coffee. If you don’t feel like eating too much vanilla-flavored Persidian, go drink it, even if you were drinking coffee back then, and you should consider the political message loosophically and secularly. Johann Sebastian Bach, who wrote the famous cantata, enthused, “Eh juhu! How sweet the coffee tastes, sweeter than a thousand kisses, softer than muscatel wine” (“Ah! How sweet the coffee tastes!”) characterizes coffee.

The first coffee in Germany has arrived in Regensburg. The Prinzessinnenkaffee, which was introduced in 1686, is 335 years old. It consists of a cup of flavored coffee and a pastry. It is available in various German cities, including Hamburg, Bremen, Hanover and Ley. This means that there is no real coffee that represents the first coffee in Germany. As you can see, it is a fact that coffee is not out of the lives of Germans and has become a national drink along with beer. Nowadays, it is important to remember that these drinks are not among the main urent drinks. In this case, as many sent coffee for coffee, but then – come on! – prefer it to beer. The Germans’ love of coffee is confirmed by the statistics. Coffee consumption in Germany will rise to just over 100 liters per average consumer per year over the course of the year.”