![Eat This Podcast artwork](https://is5-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts113/v4/80/f4/14/80f41429-99ec-bfd9-9a26-4707f2f91baa/mza_9160945074975635152.jpg/100x100bb.jpg)
Coffee leaf rust is bad news
Eat This Podcast
English - October 05, 2020 11:10 - 28 minutes - 26.1 MB - ★★★★★ - 52 ratingsFood Arts Society & Culture Documentary Homepage Download Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts RSS feed
Coffee leaf rust is bad, but at least in the short term it may not be the threat you think it is
Stuart McCookWhen I think of Ceylon — Sri Lanka — I think of tea, but that’s because I wasn’t alive 150 years ago. In the 1860s, coffee was the island’s most important crop. Coffee leaf rust, a fungus, put paid to the coffee, but only after a global downturn in coffee prices, and planters switched to tea. The rust, however, is not the reason the Brits drink tea rather than coffee, just one of the things I learned from Stuart McCook, who has studied the history of coffee leaf rust and what it might hold for the future.
Notes
Stuart McCook’s book is Coffee Is Not Forever: A Global History of the Coffee Leaf Rust.
The disease is no stranger to news media. Coffee Rust Is Going to Ruin Your Morning is a recent example that actually says nothing about your morning joe — but does blame rust for Britain’s preference for tea.
There is a transcript, thanks to the show’s supporters.
Banner photo shows coffee leaf rust inside a leaf, used under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Australia License