It was brought to my attention yesterday by one of my family members during a discusison about coffee substitutes in the Civil War, that there was a tree that produced seeds that taste exactly like coffee when ground.
He found a book in his library called The Ghosts of Evolution by Connie Barlow. It documents plant-life that has been around for thousands and millions of years and is little known or rare today.
I found the section on the Kentucky Coffee Tree and read it. The tree is quite rare, but grows across the area of the US east of the Mississippi. It is found in the wild, but is easily domesticated. The pods are extremely hard to break and the contents are poisonous to humans when consumed raw.
"Keep children away from the pods of Kentucky coffee tree. Seeds poisonous to humans, but seldom fatal" (pg. 130).
But if you roast the seeds and grind them they are no longer poisonous and can be used to brew. The books states that it tastes just like coffee. One of the people interviewed in the books explains he had served the brew to friends and they did not believe him whne they were told it wasn't coffee.
"Gymnocladus [Kentucky Coffee Tree] was awarded its common name by early white settlers in Kentucky, who used the roasted beans as a cofee substitute" (pg. 130).
Has anyone else heard of this plant or tried the coffee? Does anyone have any other documentation on it? I found it interesting and thought I would share.
He found a book in his library called The Ghosts of Evolution by Connie Barlow. It documents plant-life that has been around for thousands and millions of years and is little known or rare today.
I found the section on the Kentucky Coffee Tree and read it. The tree is quite rare, but grows across the area of the US east of the Mississippi. It is found in the wild, but is easily domesticated. The pods are extremely hard to break and the contents are poisonous to humans when consumed raw.
"Keep children away from the pods of Kentucky coffee tree. Seeds poisonous to humans, but seldom fatal" (pg. 130).
But if you roast the seeds and grind them they are no longer poisonous and can be used to brew. The books states that it tastes just like coffee. One of the people interviewed in the books explains he had served the brew to friends and they did not believe him whne they were told it wasn't coffee.
"Gymnocladus [Kentucky Coffee Tree] was awarded its common name by early white settlers in Kentucky, who used the roasted beans as a cofee substitute" (pg. 130).
Has anyone else heard of this plant or tried the coffee? Does anyone have any other documentation on it? I found it interesting and thought I would share.
Comment