I love coffee. Anyone who has been around me for long knows that I really, really like to drink coffee. I don’t drink much, just a cup in the morning and sometimes another later in the day. I don’t drink it for the caffine, but for the wonderful taste! Of course, the caffine is a nice side-effect… Coffee haters, don’t know what they’re missing. Anyway, I have come across something that I once thought was urban legend, but I now know fully well that it is very real, very good, and very gross.
If you have seen the movie "The Bucket List" you know just what I am talking about. I’m talking about a coffee that is so rare, and so expensive that only the elite of coffee connoisseurs ever get to taste it. What is it? It is known best as Kopi Luwak and sells for up to $100 per cup or $600 per pound.
There is a nocturnal cat, called a Civet, that lives in the jungles of South East Asia. These cats were once considered by plantation owners to be a nuisance because they would only eat the ripest and best coffee cherries off the coffee trees. Farmers have since discovered that the cat is unable to digest the beans. It "processes" the ripe fruit and then deposits it in little piles for coffee farmers to find. The farmers harvest the beans from the pile, remove the undigested parchment that is still covering the green coffee bean, and roast them. Annually there are less than 1000 pounds of this stuff harvested and put on the market.
It is arguably one of the best coffees in the world, and one of the most rare drinks in the world. Many would think that it ought to be rare if not extinct! It is thought that the enzymes in the cat’s digestive tract along with the fact that the cat only picks the best beans are the reason this makes such good coffee. It sounds pretty gross to me, but as a coffee lover, I can’t help but want to try it.
So how is a missionary like me ever going to get to try something so extravagant? Recently I ventured into one of our tribes to do some work for the missionaries there. In talking with them I discovered that a major trade item for the tribe is coffee. I enjoyed their coffee every morning while we were there. It was so fresh and rich…I truly looked forward to every morning when Robbie would bring me my coffee!
Then one morning I asked if I could buy some coffee and take it with me. Robbie told me that I could, but there were two kinds for two prices. The kind I was drinking was "in season" and cost about $2 per kilo. I couldn’t believe it! That was less than $1 per pound. Then she said there is the expensive kind that sells for around $10 per kilo ($4.50 per pound). She proceded to tell me about this rare tree cat that eats the berries off the trees and…
So today Robbie came through and in my house is 1 kilo of "Kape Alamid," or more commonly known as Kopi Luwak. I first heard about this kind of coffee over a year ago and really wanted to try it, (and wanted to throw up all at once) but I knew it was way to rich for my blood. Now I have 1/500th of the world’s supply of it for less than half the price of coffee at Starbucks! I guess "when you live by faith, you have to take what the Lord gives you…even if it’s a "Poo Brew."