Restaurants & Bars
Towson Serves Up Deals For National Coffee Day 2019
This weekend it's National Coffee Day, and several businesses in Towson are offering deals on a cup.
TOWSON, MD — Excitement is building for coffee lovers across the country as National Coffee Day is brewing around the corner, on Sunday, Sept. 29. It's a day to enjoy the incredibly popular morning beverage and also cash in on the great deals going on in Towson.
Whether it's buy-one-get-one-free or free coffee with purchase of a sandwich, see what's in store for the holiday.
Both local and national retailers are offering special deals for the day in the Towson area.
Find out what's happening in Towsonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Dunkin': Buy one hot coffee at participating restaurants nationwide on National Coffee Day and you'll get a second one for free. Dunkin' is at 201 York Road and 1600 East Joppa Road in Towson.
Godiva: The famed chocolate company is offering a free 12-ounce hot or iced coffee at all locations with any purchase from Sept. 27-29. Godiva boutiques are also offering 50 percent off bags on Sept. 29. Godiva is in the Towson Town Center at 825 Dulaney Valley Road in Towson.
Find out what's happening in Towsonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Rise Southern Biscuits and Righteous Chicken: The first 100 customers get a free La Colombe Coffee Roasters coffee with the purchase of a sandwich while supplies last. Rise is at 1620 York Road.
7-Eleven: For 7-Rewards members, any sized coffee for only $1 on Sunday, Sept. 29. In Towson, there are stores at 321 York Road, 8621 Pleasant Plains Road and 8507 Loch Raven Boulevard.
Do you know of other coffee deals in Towson? Tell us in the comments!
It's a mystery exactly how or when coffee was discovered, however the most popular legend traces its origin back to a goat farmer in Ethiopia. Coffee then eventually made its way to the Arabian Peninsula in the 15th century, before travelers brought it to Europe two hundred years later, according to the National Coffee Association.
A young naval officer named Gabriel de Clieu was the first to bring it to the Americas in the middle part of the 17th century, and it eventually made it to the United States in the decades following, according to the National Coffee Association.
— By Gus Saltonstall and Elizabeth Janney
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