"The cup of coffee" is not an idiom that I know of. It just means a cup full of coffee.
If you're talking over a cup of coffee, you have a cup of coffee on the table in front of you -- you're talking while drinking coffee. Lots of people have informal chats in coffee houses, or while having a meal or snack.
Does buying a cup of coffee have to have a meaning?
If you're talking over a cup of coffee, you have a cup of coffee on the table in front of you -- you're talking while drinking coffee. Lots of people have informal chats in coffee houses, or while having a meal or snack.
I assume you mean the idiomatic phrase 'over a cup of coffee', which generally means to be so casual about a topic that one might choose to discuss it while in a cafe or restaurant. In a simple sentence it would be used like this: 'They sat and talked about the weather over a cup of coffee'. Or 'After the scandal, both parties had calmed enough to discuss it over a cup of coffee'. This idiom can also be shortened to 'over coffee'. E.g. 'Although at first there was an issue, they talked over coffee and it was soon sorted out'.
* Joe * java * 'bucket of mud' ... meaning cup of coffee
One cup of coffee can fit in a coffee cup that is 1 cup in size.
Boil some water to make a cup of tea or coffee
you ask for a cup of hot coffee.
This will depend on the quality/grade of the coffee and the value of the coffee cup. For example, if you drink normal coffee with a cup made of gold and decorated with diamonds, then the cup will cost more than the coffee.
The ideal coffee beans to ground coffee ratio for brewing the perfect cup of coffee is typically 1:15, meaning 1 part coffee beans to 15 parts water. This ratio can be adjusted based on personal preference for a stronger or milder brew.
It depends on the size of the coffee cup.
Approximately 1 cup of ground coffee can be produced from 1 cup of coffee beans.