'Eine Kleine Divertimento' - the subject of Beethoven and his grinding of coffee beans. I understand from this forum that the number of beans he habitually ground was 60 (and not 16 as I previously thought).
Q1. Is 60 coffee beans a large number for the drinking habits of an average coffe drinker ?
Q2. Would these beans have been whole beans ?
Q3. Assuming Beethoven ground coffee beans (counting each one before he did so) is it logical to assume these 60 beans per grinding were exactly the right number for the great man to obtain a fixed quantity and quality of coffee each time he did so ?
Q4. Was Beethoven's coffee pot of a size that suited 60 ground coffee beans ? (I assume so, since the whole point of grinding coffee beans is to obtain fresh coffee).
and finally -
Q5. Coffee is said to keep a person awake who might otherwise fall asleep. Is it possible Beethoven knew this and drank copious quantities of coffee during the time when he was working alone ?
The subject is 'mildly' interesting (but not so much that it could be the 'grounds' - excuse the 'coffe type' puns - for debate).
R
[This message has been edited by robert newman (edited 04-12-2006).]
Q1. Is 60 coffee beans a large number for the drinking habits of an average coffe drinker ?
Q2. Would these beans have been whole beans ?
Q3. Assuming Beethoven ground coffee beans (counting each one before he did so) is it logical to assume these 60 beans per grinding were exactly the right number for the great man to obtain a fixed quantity and quality of coffee each time he did so ?
Q4. Was Beethoven's coffee pot of a size that suited 60 ground coffee beans ? (I assume so, since the whole point of grinding coffee beans is to obtain fresh coffee).
and finally -
Q5. Coffee is said to keep a person awake who might otherwise fall asleep. Is it possible Beethoven knew this and drank copious quantities of coffee during the time when he was working alone ?
The subject is 'mildly' interesting (but not so much that it could be the 'grounds' - excuse the 'coffe type' puns - for debate).
R
[This message has been edited by robert newman (edited 04-12-2006).]
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