Tea originated in Southwest China during the Shang dynasty, where it was used as a medicinal drink. An early credible record of tea drinking dates to the 3rd century AD, in a medical text written by Hua Tuo.
Printed with Japanese archival ink on a matte Hahnemühle paper in own workshop outside Copenhagen, Denmark.
The print will be delivered protectively packed in a cardboard tube. No frame is included.
Vanilla is a flavoring derived from orchids of the genus Vanilla, primarily from the Mexican species, flat-leaved vanilla. The word vanilla, derived from vainilla, the diminutive of the Spanish word vaina (vaina itself meaning a sheath or a pod), is translated simply as "little pod"
Printed with Japanese archival ink on a matte Hahnemühle paper in own workshop outside Copenhagen, Denmark.
The print will be delivered protectively packed in a cardboard tube. No frame is included.
Theobroma cacao, also called the cacao tree and the cocoa tree, is a small (4–8 m tall) evergreentree in the family Malvaceae, native to the deep tropical regions of Mesoamerica. Its seeds, cocoa beans, are used to make chocolate liquor, cocoa solids, cocoa butter and chocolate.
Printed with Japanese archival ink on a matte Hahnemühle paper in own workshop outside Copenhagen, Denmark.
The print will be delivered protectively packed in a cardboard tube. No frame is included.
Ginger originated in Island Southeast Asia and was likely domesticated first by the Austronesian peoples. It was transported with them throughout the Indo-Pacific during the Austronesian expansion (c. 5,000BP), reaching as far as Hawaii. Ginger is one of the first spices to have been exported from Asia, arriving in Europe with the spice trade, and was used by ancient Greeks and Romans
Printed with Japanese archival ink on a matte Hahnemühle paper in own workshop outside Copenhagen, Denmark.
The print will be delivered protectively packed in a cardboard tube. No frame is included.
While coffee is native to Ethiopia and Sudan, the earliest credible evidence of coffee-drinking as the modern beverage appears in modern-day Yemen in southern Arabia in the middle of the 15th century in Sufi shrines.
Printed with Japanese archival ink on a matte Hahnemühle paper in own workshop outside Copenhagen, Denmark.
The print will be delivered protectively packed in a cardboard tube. No frame is included.