Pour yourself a cup and dig in!
This mega-set of coffee, tea, and chocolate trivia moves from beginner to brain-teaser.
You’ll explore origins and legends, processing and science, iconic drinks, global rituals, famous makers, and tasty confections.
Perfect for pub quizzes, lessons, or your next café conversation.
Why Coffee, Tea & Chocolate Make Great Trivia
These three drinks shaped trade routes, empires, and daily rituals.
They blend botany, chemistry, craft, culture, and lore... meaning there’s always a curious angle, from fermentation microbes to ceremony etiquette and dessert history.
They’re also universal yet wonderfully local.
Whether it’s an Ethiopian jebena, a Japanese tea ceremony, or Swiss chocolate, every region adds its own twist, ideal territory for engaging, layered trivia.

Coffee Origins & History
Q: What plant genus gives us coffee?
A: Coffea.
Q: Which two coffee species dominate global cups?
A: Arabica and robusta.
Q: Coffee plants are native to which region?
A: East Africa, especially Ethiopia.
Q: Which Ethiopian goatherd is credited in legend with coffee’s discovery?
A: Kaldi (legend).
Q: Which Arabic word for coffee also once meant “wine”?
A: Qahwa.
Q: Which empire’s coffeehouses (kahvehane) helped spread the drink westward?
A: The Ottoman Empire.
Q: Which Yemeni port lent its name to “mocha”?
A: Mocha (al-Makha).
Q: “Java” coffee references an island in which country?
A: Indonesia.
Q: What nickname did lively 17th-century English coffeehouses earn?
A: “Penny universities.”
Q: Which 1773 protest nudged American tastes from tea toward coffee?
A: The Boston Tea Party.
Q: Who composed the playful “Coffee Cantata”?
A: Johann Sebastian Bach.
Q: Brazil rose to coffee dominance in which century?
A: The 19th century.
Q: Which disease devastated Sri Lankan coffee in the 1800s?
A: Coffee leaf rust (Hemileia vastatrix).
Q: Who ferried a prized coffee seedling to Martinique in 1720?
A: Gabriel de Clieu.
Q: Who received an 1884 patent often cited as the first espresso machine?
A: Angelo Moriondo.
Q: Which Italians refined pressurized espresso in the early 1900s?
A: Luigi Bezzera and Desiderio Pavoni.
Q: Early instant coffee (c. 1901) is linked to which chemist?
A: Satori Kato.
Q: Who popularized the glass siphon brewer in 19th-century France?
A: Madame Vassieux of Lyon.
Q: By the 20th century, coffee had become one of the most traded what?
A: Agricultural commodities.
Q: What term described deliberately aged Indonesian beans from colonial warehouses?
A: Old Brown Java.
Q: Which 1988 initiative sought fairer prices for smallholders?
A: Fairtrade (born as Max Havelaar).

Coffee Beans, Roasting & Processing
Q: Which has more caffeine on average: arabica or robusta?
A: Robusta.
Q: The “coffee bean” is actually which part of the fruit?
A: The seed.
Q: Removing the skin and pulp reveals which layer?
A: Parchment-covered seed.
Q: In the washed process, mucilage is removed how?
A: Fermentation and washing.
Q: The natural process dries coffee in what form?
A: Whole cherries in the sun.
Q: “Honey process” leaves what on during drying?
A: Some sticky mucilage.
Q: Which reaction largely drives roasting’s browning flavors?
A: The Maillard reaction.
Q: What audible milestone occurs around ~196–205°C?
A: First crack.
Q: What darker stage appears near ~224–230°C?
A: Second crack.
Q: In roasting, what are “quakers”?
A: Under-ripe beans that roast pale.
Q: What is a “peaberry”?
A: A single rounded seed instead of two.
Q: High-altitude arabica often tastes denser and brighter because ripening is what?
A: Slower.
Q: What do SHG/SHB labels indicate?
A: Strictly High Grown / Strictly Hard Bean.
Q: Screen size is measured in what units?
A: 64ths of an inch.
Q: Post-roast “resting” allows release of which gas?
A: CO₂ (degassing).
Q: A “French roast” denotes what level?
A: Very dark.
Q: Oily surfaces on beans usually suggest what?
A: Dark roast or aging.
Q: Which inert gas often flushes retail bags?
A: Nitrogen.
Q: Green coffee stores best under which conditions?
A: Cool, dry, stable.
Q: Which decaf method uses only water and filters?
A: Swiss Water Process.
Q: “Sugarcane” decaf commonly uses which solvent?
A: Ethyl acetate.
Espresso & Brewing Methods
Q: Espresso typically brews at about how many bars of pressure?
A: Around 9 bars.
Q: What grind size suits espresso?
A: Fine.
Q: The tawny foam on espresso is called what?
A: Crema.
Q: In espresso, a 1:2 ratio means what?
A: 1 part grounds → 2 parts liquid.
Q: “Dialing in” means tuning which variables?
A: Grind, dose, yield, time.
Q: A ristretto is how compared with a normale?
A: Shorter, more concentrated.
Q: A lungo is how compared with a normale?
A: Longer, more diluted.
Q: Classic cappuccino milk texture is what?
A: Velvety microfoam.
Q: The flat white is often claimed by which countries?
A: Australia and New Zealand.
Q: “Macchiato” literally means what in Italian?
A: “Stained/marked.”
Q: A cortado pairs espresso with roughly equal parts of what?
A: Warm milk.
Q: The Americano name is linked to which wartime folklore?
A: WWII soldiers diluting espresso.
Q: Who invented the AeroPress (2005)?
A: Alan Adler.
Q: Who designed the Chemex (1941)?
A: Peter Schlumbohm.
Q: Which Italian patented a classic French press in 1929?
A: Attilio Calimani.
Q: Ideal brew water is roughly what temperature in °C?
A: About 90–96°C.
Q: Why pre-wet grounds to “bloom”?
A: Release CO₂ for even extraction.
Q: Name three pour-over drippers.
A: V60, Kalita Wave, Chemex.
Q: Ultra-fine “powder” grind is traditional for which method?
A: Turkish coffee in a cezve/ibrik.
Q: A moka pot brews using what kind of pressure?
A: Low steam pressure.
Q: In café parlance, TDS stands for what?
A: Total dissolved solids.

Global Coffee Culture
Q: Which country’s café life centers on fast, stand-up espressos?
A: Italy.
Q: Ethiopia’s traditional ceremony uses which pot?
A: The jebena.
Q: Which coffee tradition gained UNESCO status in 2013?
A: Turkish coffee culture.
Q: Which nation often tops per-capita coffee consumption?
A: Finland.
Q: What’s coffee with hot milk called in France?
A: Café au lait.
Q: What’s the similar drink called in Spain/Latin America?
A: Café con leche.
Q: Vietnam’s iced coffee with condensed milk is called what?
A: Cà phê sữa đá.
Q: Greece’s foamy instant-coffee drink is what?
A: Frappé.
Q: Cuba’s sugar-whipped short espresso is called what?
A: Café cubano (with espuma).
Q: Cardamom-spiced Arabic coffee from a dallah is called what?
A: Qahwa.
Q: Which whiskey-and-cream coffee did Joe Sheridan invent?
A: Irish coffee.
Q: Mexico’s cinnamon-spiced pot brew is what?
A: Café de olla.
Q: A gelato “drowned” in espresso is what dessert?
A: Affogato.
Q: Which controversial Indonesian coffee involves civets?
A: Kopi luwak.
Q: Brazil’s tiny, strong, sweet pour is called what?
A: Cafézinho.
Q: Vienna’s foam-topped classic akin to cappuccino is what?
A: Wiener Melange.
Q: Everyday Lisbon espresso slang is what?
A: Bica.
Q: Which 2020 trend whipped instant coffee, sugar, and water?
A: Dalgona coffee.
Q: What SF drink is a short cortado in a rocks glass?
A: Gibraltar.
Q: Which country popularized theatrical siphon bars?
A: Japan.
Q: What movement prizes origin transparency and artisanal methods?
A: Third-wave coffee.
Tea Origins & History
Q: What is the tea plant’s scientific name?
A: Camellia sinensis.
Q: Name the two principal botanical varieties.
A: Var. sinensis and var. assamica.
Q: Which ruler is credited in Chinese legend with discovering tea?
A: Emperor Shen Nong (legend).
Q: The oldest continuous tea culture is in which country?
A: China.
Q: Japan’s ritualized tea preparation is called what?
A: Chanoyu (tea ceremony).
Q: Which trading company drove tea imports to Britain?
A: The British East India Company.
Q: In what year was the Boston Tea Party?
A: 1773.
Q: The British established large estates in which Indian region in the 1800s?
A: Assam.
Q: Which Himalayan tea is the “Champagne of teas”?
A: Darjeeling.
Q: Earl Grey is scented with which citrus?
A: Bergamot.
Q: The origin of “English Breakfast” as a blend is what?
A: Uncertain/debated.
Q: What is the traditional Russian water-heating device for tea?
A: A samovar.
Q: Morocco’s national drink blends green tea with what herb?
A: Mint.
Q: Bubble tea (boba) began in which place?
A: Taiwan.
Q: “Ceylon tea” comes from which modern nation?
A: Sri Lanka.
Q: Powdered green tea used in ceremony is called what?
A: Matcha.
Q: What aged/fermented Yunnan tea is prized for depth?
A: Pu-erh (puer).
Q: Which Chinese black tea is famously pine-smoked?
A: Lapsang souchong.
Q: Who’s often credited with popularizing tea bags in the 1900s?
A: Thomas Sullivan.
Q: In Britain, milk-first vs. milk-last is mainly what?
A: Tradition and preference.
Q: Who wrote the 1906 classic The Book of Tea?
A: Okakura Kakuzō.

Tea Types, Processing & Brewing
Q: Name the six classic tea categories.
A: White, green, yellow, oolong, black, dark.
Q: What chiefly distinguishes green from black tea?
A: Oxidation (halted vs. promoted).
Q: Withering primarily reduces what in fresh leaves?
A: Moisture.
Q: Rolling/bruising does what to the leaf?
A: Breaks cells to start oxidation.
Q: “Kill-green” (fixation) heat treatment does what?
A: Stops enzymatic oxidation.
Q: Baihao Yinzhen (“Silver Needle”) is what kind of tea?
A: Chinese white tea.
Q: Tieguanyin belongs to which category?
A: Oolong.
Q: Gyokuro differs from sencha because bushes are what?
A: Shade-grown pre-harvest.
Q: Hojicha is a Japanese tea that’s what?
A: Roasted.
Q: Genmaicha blends green tea with what ingredient?
A: Roasted rice.
Q: Darjeeling first flush is brewed to highlight which qualities?
A: Light, floral, brisk.
Q: Assam typically offers what compared with Darjeeling?
A: Fuller, maltier body.
Q: Typical water temperature for delicate greens?
A: ~70–80°C.
Q: Recommended temperature for most black teas?
A: ~95–100°C.
Q: Gongfu brewing emphasizes what approach?
A: High leaf ratio, short infusions.
Q: A gaiwan is what?
A: Lidded cup for brewing/sipping.
Q: Cold-brewed green tea tends to taste how?
A: Smoother, less bitter.
Q: Which amino acid gives tea umami notes?
A: L-theanine.
Q: Coppery color in black tea comes from which compounds?
A: Theaflavins/thearubigins.
Q: Rooibos and chamomile are considered what?
A: Herbal tisanes (not true tea).
Q: Yerba mate comes from which plant family and vessel?
A: A holly; gourd with bombilla.
Chocolate Origins & Making
Q: What is cacao’s scientific name?
A: Theobroma cacao.
Q: Cacao is native to which regions?
A: Mesoamerica and the Amazon basin.
Q: Which ancient cultures first drank cacao as a spiced beverage?
A: Olmecs, Maya, later Aztecs.
Q: In Aztec markets, cacao beans sometimes served as what?
A: Money.
Q: Spaniards brought chocolate to Europe in which century?
A: The 16th century.
Q: Who invented the cocoa press/alkalizing in 1828?
A: Coenraad van Houten.
Q: Who invented the conche in 1879?
A: Rodolphe Lindt.
Q: Who pioneered milk chocolate commercially?
A: Daniel Peter (with Henri Nestlé).
Q: White chocolate lacks which cocoa component?
A: Cocoa solids (non-fat).
Q: Name cacao’s three classic genetic groups.
A: Criollo, Forastero, Trinitario.
Q: Fermentation typically lasts how long?
A: Several days.
Q: Which microbes drive cacao fermentation?
A: Yeasts, lactic and acetic bacteria.
Q: Tempering targets which stable crystal form?
A: Beta-V.
Q: What surface issue appears when sugar recrystallizes?
A: Sugar bloom.
Q: “Single-origin” chocolate means what?
A: Cacao from one region/estate.
Q: “Bean-to-bar” makers control which steps?
A: From roasting/grinding to finished bars.
Q: Couverture chocolate contains extra what?
A: Cocoa butter.
Q: A bar’s percent number indicates what?
A: Total cocoa content.
Q: What are cacao nibs?
A: Crushed bits of roasted beans.
Q: Chocolate “liquor” is actually what?
A: Pure ground cacao paste.
Q: “Cacao” often means raw beans; “cocoa” often means what?
A: Processed powder/products.
Chocolate Culture, Desserts & Brands
Q: Which two European countries are famed for fine chocolate?
A: Belgium and Switzerland.
Q: Which West African nation often leads in cocoa-bean output?
A: Côte d’Ivoire.
Q: Gianduja blends chocolate with which nut?
A: Hazelnut.
Q: Nutella is best described how?
A: A sweet hazelnut-cocoa spread.
Q: Ganache traditionally combines which two ingredients?
A: Chocolate and cream.
Q: Chocolate truffles are named for resembling what?
A: Truffle mushrooms.
Q: Which dense American chocolate dessert comes in squares?
A: Brownies.
Q: Which savory Mexican sauce famously uses chocolate?
A: Mole poblano.
Q: Who created the chocolate chip cookie at the Toll House Inn?
A: Ruth Wakefield.
Q: Which Viennese cake pairs chocolate with apricot jam?
A: Sacher-Torte.
Q: Brazil’s sprinkle-coated chocolate fudge bite is called what?
A: Brigadeiro.
Q: A chocolatier primarily does what?
A: Crafts confections from finished chocolate.
Q: A chocolate maker primarily does what?
A: Turns cacao beans into chocolate.
Q: Name two common ethical labels on chocolate.
A: Fairtrade, Rainforest Alliance.
Q: Chocolate’s primary stimulant is what alkaloid?
A: Theobromine.
Q: Why should dogs avoid chocolate?
A: Theobromine can be toxic.
Q: Which pink-hued “fourth” chocolate debuted in 2017?
A: Ruby chocolate.
Q: “Drinking chocolate” differs from cocoa because it uses what?
A: Melted chocolate.
Q: Traditional Mesoamerican chocolate drinks were frothed with which tool?
A: A molinillo whisk.
Q: Which triangular Swiss bar (1908) nods to the Matterhorn?
A: Toblerone.
Q: Which Pennsylvania town is tied to Milton S. Hershey?
A: Hershey, Pennsylvania.
Ellie Ewert is the founder and author of RandomTrivia.co, blending her passion for research with years of experience in content creation to deliver accurate, engaging, and well-sourced trivia. Dedicated to providing readers with trustworthy and entertaining facts, she applies meticulous fact-checking and SEO expertise to ensure every article meets the highest standards. Read more about our high standards in our Editorial Guidelines.
