whome,

Per capita it’s Finland that drinks the most coffee apparently in total numbers it’s USA, Brazil, Japan, Indonesia…

whome,

Am I reading this wrong, or are apart from the Pepsi thing all per capita facts? How is this surprising you don’t need a large population for that.

moon,

100% of statistics that make the EU sound good are believed on the spot.

jnj,

100% of people who say shit like this in reference to Norway don’t know that Norway isn’t a member of the EU.

Valmond,

Norway isn’t in the EU dude.

mctoasterson,

Skjera bagera

Atomic,

And this is why we should be critical to our sources, especially when it’s “some guy on the internet”.

It’s simply not true.

teslasaur,

Bull-fucking-shit that USA consumes more coffee per capita than Sweden, Finland and Norway. coffeeabout.com/coffee-consumption-by-country/

Valmond,

coffeeabout.com/…/Coffee-consumption-chart.png

Fuck, gotta go get moar coffee

pantyhosewimp,

The site coffeeabout.com references worldatlas.com which is so full of advertising that it hangs Safari on a weak iPhone and thus I can’t dig any further for a reliable source of that info.

drmoose,

Ah to have natural resource riches and a liberal society!

doggle,

There’s simply no way Norway has the US beat for total taco consumption; even per capita consumption would be impressive.

nBodyProblem, (edited )

Seriously. Southern CA alone is 4-5x the population of all of Norway, and that region often has 3-4 taco shops per block when it’s allowed by zoning.

Edit: the USA has 75,000 Mexican restaurants. That means that there are only 73 people in Norway for every Mexican restaurant in the United States.

The average restaurant in the USA serves 100 people per day. That means that, on average, US Mexican restaurants serve more people daily than the entire population of Norway.

figaro,

Taco trucks just park wherever they want and deliver delicious tacos to the world. Zoning laws be damned

kieron115,

Even serving 7.5 million people per day that leaves 330-some million people every day who don’t eat tacos. Assuming every customer ate a taco with their meal, ~2,200 out of every 100,000 people eats at least one taco each day, so ~2.2%. This doesn’t account for people eating multiple tacos, however.

BakedGoods,

Taco related products have their own aisle in almost every Nordic supermarket no matter how small and is often eaten once a week in every family. Not surprising considering any flatbread based food will inevitably be a hit in the Nordics.

The way we eat tacos would seem foreign in the U.S or Mexico. Way more fresh vegetables for example.

deltreed,
@deltreed@lemmy.world avatar

And yet, they closed the Noway ride ‘Maelstrom’ at Epcot. I’m still sad.

JusticeForPorygon,
@JusticeForPorygon@lemmy.world avatar

I mean, it’s still there, they just replaced all the Norse gods with frozen characters. The track layout, and even the ride vehicles are exactly the same.

deltreed,
@deltreed@lemmy.world avatar

Yes, but it’s not the same atmosphere, story, or visuals. It went from a serious tone to very Disneyesque.

arin,

Pretty sure California eats more tacos

FiniteBanjo,

Maybe I’m a Norwegian and I just never knew…?

pseudo,
@pseudo@jlai.lu avatar

For comics, idk but for manga specifically the second country is France.

Bogasse,
@Bogasse@lemmy.ml avatar

Yeah, I think these stats are bs, some people are also debunking the taco bit.

According to Wikipedia, France is about 40% of the European market and I don’t think Japanese read much western comics, so I don’t think that’s what we talk about.

In my perception this French anomaly comes from two factors :

  1. There was a French TV segment in the 90s called “club Dorothé” that imported a lot of Japanese animation, initially because it was cheaper that producing or importing other TV shows. This got a whole generation addicted to mangas and now it’s just part of culture.
  2. There is an actual cultural proximity between France and Japan, the most obvious part being the obsession about food.
pseudo,
@pseudo@jlai.lu avatar

actual cultural proximity between France and Japan

Yes. It is also my perception. We are so far apart from each other, physically and culturally but somehow it fells like there is some link that connected us. For example, French and Japanese are among the hardest language to learn in the world, bc they both have a overly complicated writting system but somehow, there is an ease for a japanese speaker to learn spoken french vice versa.

Johanno,

Also Norway is the country with the second most of Norway in their country. Just right after Hawaii.

And they are the second most planet in the galaxy. Just after the time lords.

query,

Well, the US is the country with the most people of Norwegian descent, ahead of Norway. Of course it helps up the number when you can include people with less than 100% ancestry in a much larger country.

secretlyaddictedtolinux,

there are also many people in Norway who are very beautiful. so many of them are so pretty or handsome, and even the handsome ones are pretty

BigDickEnergy,

I know the coffee bit is bullshit (coffeeabout.com/coffee-consumption-by-country/) so likely the other stuff is too

lauha,

Person who made this mixes absolute and per capita measurements. Probably in more than one category

khannie,
@khannie@lemmy.world avatar

Well it might just be a mistake.

Norway is second on that per capita list and USA is first in tonnage. I could see how USA first, Norway second could be bungled out of that. Perhaps after a glass of wine or two. Or three maybe.

12KG of dried beans per capita is astounding. Those Scandinavians are giants among us.

Pulptastic,

I drink about 11kg dried beans on average. Daily brew is 60g and I drink half, so 30g. 365*30 = 10950g, just under 11 kg. There are occasional days I’ll have an extra cup out and about.

Vast majority of it is locally roasted.

eodur,

I drink about 20kg of coffee per year. Those Norwegians are lightweights.

LazerFX,

I order about 1.5kg of beans per month here in the UK, mostly from farrers in Kendal, and it’s easy to drink that much, it’s only 2 or 3 cups a day.

coaxil,

No Australia in that list at all??? Not sure how we sit, but boy do we hit coffee hard in this country

khannie,
@khannie@lemmy.world avatar

I was curious so went digging a little.

This page says 2.2M 60KG bags in 2023 which works out at just over 5KG per capita (2.2 x 60M / 26M). That would put Australia around Croatia level on that graph.

So something smells. Not sure if it’s the dry weight part as roasted coffee is lighter than the unroasted beans that come in those huge bags but those beans are dried. Maybe that graph is just plain wrong.

Anyway… It looks like you guys are fair coffee junkies alright.

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