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Turkish coffee, on the house today in D.C.

Author

Michael Chen

Senior Web Developer
Through the month of September, urban workers can let someone else pick up the tab for their daily cup. Beginning today in Dupont Circle, a mobile Turkish coffee truck will be making the rounds in the District, handing out free Turkish coffee to drum up attention for September’s inaugural Turkish Cultural Heritage Month and to introduce local palates to Turkey’s coffee culture. For the 10-plus days leading up to the annual Turkish Festival on Sept. 30, the truck will be rolling onto busy D.C. streets (including Georgetown’s M Street and the tourist-and-fed-packed area around the National Museum of the American Indian) and handing out as many as 1,000 small cups of coffee a day. Look out for a sky blue truck plastered with motifs from Turkey, including a steaming cup of coffee. Kurukahveci Mehmet Efendi, an Istanbul-based coffee company, is footing the bill (and the beans) for the project, launched by Gizem White, a board member of American Turkish Association of Washington. White, who has become the defacto ambassador for the coffee here in D.C., explains that though Turkish coffee isn’t made from unusual ingredients — Arabica beans and fresh water and sugar are typical — it’s the age-old brewing method that give it its unique, strong flavor. The ground coffee and fresh water are boiled in a copper pot till a light foam develops; the finished product is served in cups along with the   Grab a cup of the strong coffee in Dupont Circle today, or Georgetown tomorrow. grounds, which sink to the bottom of the cup and are frequently read by fortune tellers to determine the fate of the drinker. In keeping with that tradition, fortune tellers will be along for the ride with Gizem and co., should you want your grounds read and your fortunes forecast; just let the server know when you grab your cup. Source: washingtonpost.com/blogs/going-out-gurus/post/turkish-coffee-on-the-house-today-in-dc/2012/09/17/97503964-00f0-11e2-b260-32f4a8db9b7e_blog.html

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Sarah Anderson

Senior Tech Writer & Developer Advocate
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