[custom_adv] A Cuban coffee, or cafecito, is the nation’s history in a cup. Iconic trademarks associated with a cafecito — such as its slightly bitter flavor, the sweet espuma capping the dark-brown brew, and the dainty demitasse cups, or tacitas, in which it is served — mirror the history of a nation bruised by turmoil, hardship, and scarcity. [custom_adv] They are also symbols of the resiliency and creative thinking of the Cuban people who have consistently devised clever workarounds for nearly everything they need in life ever since the Cuban Revolution upended their world in 1959. [custom_adv] Cuban coffee is traditionally produced in a moka pot, an iconic symbol of coffee culture throughout Europe, the Caribbean, and Central and South America. The simple yet ingenious stainless steel pots (that are sometimes glazed in colorful enamel) brew the coffee by pushing water up through the coffee grounds with the aid of steam pressure. [custom_adv] Coffee was first introduced to Cuba by Jose Antonio Gelabert in 1748. The French colonists who arrived in Cuba after the Haitian Revolution at the end of the eighteenth century brought with them more sophisticated coffee production techniques that endure throughout Cuba’s coffee shops to this day. In its heyday in the 19th and 20th centuries, the Cuban coffee industry exported more coffee to Spain than any other country. [custom_adv] The arabica and robusta beans grown in the nation’s coffee fields were a vital part of the Cuban economy and a symbol of national pride. Cafes were not only places to enjoy a cup of coffee, but also the epicenter of cultural life. Most Cubans still outline their day around a visit to a coffee shop or a cup of coffee brewed at home even though the shops are fewer and the coffee in short supply. [custom_adv] Coffee shops, also known as ventanitas, mirror the history that unfolded following the Cuban Revolution. At the height of Havana’s cafe culture, over 150 cafes flourished on the city’s gilded streets of vividly painted houses festooned with ornate flourishes and well-to-do, elegantly dressed Cubans strolling along the harbor street known as the Malecon. [custom_adv] The coffee shop’s decline began in 1959 and took another hit in 1962 as a result of the U.S. trade embargo on Cuban goods. Cafes suffered yet again when the Soviet Union collapsed in the late 1980s: Cuba was reliant upon the exports it sold to other Communist nations and had few other outlets for its goods. [custom_adv] The collapse of the USSR ushered in a dark time for Cubans, known as the Great Recession. Coffee was still available but in anemic quantities; each precious drop reflecting the hunger of Cubans whose rations had them perpetually teetering on the brink of starvation. [custom_adv] At its lowest point in 2007, Cuba produced only 7,000 bags of coffee, a far cry from the 440,000 bags it once exported. With the help of governmental support, the output of Cuban coffee hovers at around 120,000 bags today. [custom_adv] Its slow but steady growth is also reflected in the independently owned coffee shops that have begun to reemerge on street corners that are shabbier than they were before the Revolution but still bustling with the optimism and energy of the indefatigable Cuban people. [custom_adv] A Cuban coffee, or cafecito, is the nation’s history in a cup. Iconic trademarks associated with a cafecito — such as its slightly bitter flavor, the sweet espuma capping the dark-brown brew, and the dainty demitasse cups, or tacitas, in which it is served — mirror the history of a nation bruised by turmoil, hardship, and scarcity.