What is the first thing that you relate Finland with when you first hear the name of the country? It may appear a picture of reindeer, saunas and the Northern Lights above snowy Lapland, doesn’t it? But it may never appear a picture of coffee, right? This Nordic country may not be the country that is mostly associated with coffee, but however people in Finland use to drink more coffee than people of any nation around the world.
Indeed, according to the International Coffee Organization, it is considered that in Finland people drink around 12 kilograms per person, each year. You may now imagine that Finnish coffee something special, but in fact it is not all that superior when compared with coffee from other countries around the world. The answer to the question why Finns drink so much coffee may be a complexity, but climate and culture pay the key roles.
Coffee plays an important role in Finnish culture
Most people in Finland drink five to eight cup a day. They drink it with every meal. In Finland when you are offered a coffee, it is considered rude to turn it down. It is even considered rude when you are not offered coffee when visiting someone’s home, work, or even during meetings. People there even have a special labor agreement stating that people must take two 15-minute coffee breaks a day. In Finland, there are different words for coffee drunk at different situation. According to the Pauling Barista Institute here are some of them:- aamukahvi (morning coffee)
- päiväkahvi (day coffee)
- iltakahvi (evening coffee)
- saunakahvi (sauna coffee)
- läksiäiskahvit (farewell coffee)
- mitalikahvit (medal coffee, when a Finn has won a sporting medal)
- matkakahvi (traveling coffee)
- vaalikahvit (election coffee, drank after voting in an election).