Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In 1900 Mannie Brandenstein debuted what was to become a well-known advertising campaign: "MJB Coffee Why?" In time, signs bearing the slogan appeared all over the San Francisco Bay Area. [1] "In 1898, Edward Norton, of New York, was granted a United States patent on a vacuum process for canning foods, subsequently applied to coffee. Others ...
The Arbuckles entered into a coffee roasting business together in Pittsburgh. [2] [4] In 1868, Arbuckle patented a formula for an egg-based glaze that coated coffee beans, protecting them from the air. In 1871, the brothers moved their business to New York City and formed the Arbuckle Brothers Company.
After his coffee business was established in 1910, Washington resided at a Park Slope mansion, occupying half of a city block, at 47 Prospect Park West in Brooklyn, [5] and also at an 18-bedroom country home, later known as "Washington Lodge", on a 40-acre waterfront estate at 287 South Country Road in Brookhaven, New York, near Bellport in Suffolk County, which included the largest concrete ...
The new machine, which was patented by Edmund Abel, came to be called Mr. Coffee. [1] In addition to a less bitter flavor, Abel's heating element for Mr. Coffee could also brew coffee much faster than any, similar machines available at the time. [1] Mr. Coffee could brew one cup of coffee in just 30 seconds and ten cups in just five minutes. [1]
The Coffee, Sugar and Cocoa Exchange (CSCE) was founded in 1882 as the Coffee Exchange in the City of New York. Sugar futures were added in 1914, and, on September 28, 1979, [ 1 ] the New York Coffee and Sugar Exchange merged with the New York Cocoa Exchange (which in turn had been founded in 1925) to form CSCE.
Jay Sorensen is an American inventor, real estate broker, [1] and entrepreneur best known for inventing the coffee cup sleeve in 1991, [2] and founding Java Jacket, a company manufacturing coffee cup sleeves, in 1993. [3]
Satori Kato (June 1847 - ?) was a Japanese chemist. [1] Kato was initially thought to be the inventor of the first soluble instant coffee whilst working in Chicago, after filing a patent in 1901 and exhibiting the product at the Pan-American Exposition [2] until it was rediscovered that David Strang of Invercargill, New Zealand had invented the product twelve years earlier. [3]
That exchange later merged with the New York Board of Trade, in turn acquired by IntercontinentalExchange, which operates its American futures operations as ICE Futures U.S. IntercontinentalExchange states that the ICE Futures U.S. Cocoa contract "is the benchmark for world cocoa prices."