Yes.
No they do not Coffee comes from the coffee plant or tree, chocolate is a derivitive from the cocoa plant, and its fruit, the cocoa bean.
No.
Coffee beans (which are roasted and used to make coffee) are not actually beans, but rather the seeds that come from several species of a plant of the genus Coffea, a member of the Rubiaceae family. Coffea are shrubs or small trees that usually grow to a height of around 10 feet.
The coffee plant.
Coffee beans are coffee seeds. They help the plant by making new coffee plants. What you buy at the store is roasted coffee seeds.
Tea comes from the Camellia sinensis plant, while coffee is derived from the Coffea plant. Both contain naturally occurring caffeine, which acts as a stimulant. The caffeine found in tea and coffee is produced by the plants as a defense mechanism against pests and to inhibit the growth of competing plants.
The seeds of the coffee plant, commonly known as coffee beans, are the part used to make coffee. The beans are found inside the fruit of the coffee plant, which is typically referred to as a cherry. The beans are roasted, ground, and brewed to make coffee.
yes it does - it comes from a COFFEE TREE. sounds obvious BUT a coffee tree is a shrublike plant with glossy, dark-green leaves and small, white, fragrant flowers. Native to Ethiopia, this crop is now grown around the world and is a major commodity in the world economy. there you have it!
A Arabica is a plant where coffee comes from
the coffee tree
a coffee tree of course. they originate in ethiopia a coffee tree of course
salt water and coffee