the spicesWhat makes it different from regular coffee?
what’s banaadir coffee? Don’t we all have the same way of making qahwois it banaadir coffee?
idk, thats the only brand of Somali coffee I knowwhat’s banaadir coffee? Don’t we all have the same way of making qahwo
Mr Ogsadey died a couple years ago after a lifetime of work in the coffee. Considering he was over 90 and lived with a pacemaker for 25 years, he did quite well. He was a religious man who built mosques, hospital wards, sponsored cycle clubs and soccer teams. He was the first Ethiopian to export Ethiopian coffee; it was previosuly controlled by Italian, British and Greek traders. Ethiopia Ethiopia
The sons of Mohammed Sr. are Abdullahi and Ledon Ogsadey, who mainly works with the trucking side of the business. Dire Dawa is on the rail line, and is the hub for coffee trading and transport to the sea ports of Djibouti. Harar city has no coffee trade, but the greater region of Harar, called Hararghe, is where all the coffee is grown that we call Harar.
there’s no Somali shops in your cityI wish they opened a Qahwo shop in my city, I think I would go there everyday to have a cup.
I came from a family who drinks Shaah. I got my first cup of Qahwo in Dugsi when I was 8 years old I loved it. I remember tasting the bitterness of coffee and at the sometime some weird spices which confusedmy taste buds. I would never forget my first cup it was warm, bitter and spicy then a few months later it was Ramadan I got offered my second cup of Qahwo at the Mosque, and the experience was the same as the first one it never disappointed me, I loved it.
Unfortunately since I came to The West no one have ever offered me Qahwo so I haven't had a one in a long time.