Turška kava (Slovenian Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Turška kava" in Slovenian language version.

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acoffeeexplorer.com

archive.org

armenianweekly.com

austria.info

bbc.com

bitterbrewing.com

books.google.com

deathwishcoffee.com

londonist.com

npr.org

  • Kakissis, Joanna (27. april 2013). »Don't Call It 'Turkish' Coffee, Unless, Of Course, It Is«. NPR. Pridobljeno 5. oktobra 2022.
  • Kakissis, Joanna (27. april 2013). »Don't Call It 'Turkish' Coffee, Unless, Of Course, It Is«. NPR. Pridobljeno 5. oktobra 2022.
  • Joanna Kakissis, "Don't Call It 'Turkish' Coffee, Unless, Of Course, It Is", The Salt, National Public Radio 27 April 2013: '"It wasn't always this way," says Albert Arouh, a Greek food scholar who writes under a pen name, Epicurus. "When I was a kid in the 1960s, everyone in Greece called it Turkish coffee." Arouh says he began noticing a name change after 1974, when the Greek military junta pushed for a coup in Cyprus that provoked Turkey to invade the island.' "The invasion sparked a lot of nationalism and anti-Turkish feelings," he says. "Some people tried to erase the Turks entirely from the coffee's history, and re-baptized it Greek coffee. Some even took to calling it Byzantine coffee, even though it was introduced to this part of the world in the sixteenth century, long after the Byzantine Empire's demise." By the 1980s, Arouh noticed it was no longer politically correct to order a "Turkish coffee" in Greek cafes. By the early 1990s, Greek coffee companies like Bravo (now owned by DE Master Blenders 1753 of the Netherlands) were producing commercials of sea, sun and nostalgic village scenes and declaring "in the most beautiful country in the world, we drink Greek coffee."'

ottomania.pl

piccoloneexistuje.cz

  • Piccolo neexistuje, Turek.

radio.cz

ricksteves.com

sciencedirect.com

theguideistanbul.com

thespruceeats.com

tv3.lt

unesco.org

ich.unesco.org

unesco.org

urnex.com

resources.urnex.com

web.archive.org