Up until the close of the Civil War, coffee was sold green.
It had to be roasted on a wood stove or in a skillet over a
campfire before it could be ground and brewed. In 1865 John
Arbuckle and his brother Charles, partners in a Pittsburg grocery
business, changed all this by patenting a process for roasting
and coating coffee beans with an egg and sugar glaze to seal
in the flavor and the aroma. Marketed under the name ARBUCKLES'
ARIOSA COFFEE, in patented, air tight, one pound packages, the
coffee was an instant success with chuckwagon cooks in the West
faced with the task of keeping cowboys supplied with plenty
of hot coffee out on the range. Each

package of Arbuckles' contained a stick of peppermint
candy which became a means by which that steady coffee supply
was ground. Upon hearing the cook's call, Who wants the
candy?, some of the toughest cowboys on the trail were
known to vie for the opportunity of manning the coffee grinder
in exchange for satisfying a sweet tooth. Today, thanks to the
folks at Arbuckles' the cowboys' favorite is available once
more. The one pound packages of rich beans are every inch the
full-bodied, aromatic coffee you'd expect from the likes of
Arbuckles'. There's even a piece of peppermint inside. No longer
just a fond memory for a dwindling breed of old-time cowmen,
ARBUCKLES' ARIOSA COFFEE is back and as good as ever!