Coffee review

Variety Information and Flavor description of Iron pickup Coffee Bean

Published: 2024-11-03 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2024/11/03, For the exchange of professional baristas, please follow the coffee workshop (Wechat official account cafe_style) [Typica] Tibica species closest to the original species. The bean shape is slightly longer, like an elongated egg, known as Arabigo or criollo in Central America. It has a clean citric acid taste, sweet aftertaste, low resistance to leaf rust, not easy to take care of, low seed setting of trees, and long harvest period.

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[Typica] Typica species

closest to the original species. The bean is slightly longer, like an elongated egg, and is called Arabigo or criollo in Central America. It has a clean lemon sour taste, sweet aftertaste, low resistance to leaf rust, making it difficult to care, low seed set of trees, and a long harvest period (harvest every 2 years), resulting in low yield.

Bourbon

The subspecies mutated from Typica, together with Typica, are currently the closest varieties to the original species. It was discovered at Reunion (formerly Bourbon) on the island of Madagascar. Some coffee experts think Bourbon is just a natural variant of Typica, nothing special! But in fact, Bourbon has its own characteristics, and Typica also has a high-quality taste, like red wine sour, sweet aftertaste, can be distinguished from the coffee tree leaves and beans, Bourbon leaves are relatively wide, firm coffee cherries are relatively small, relatively dense, so the bean appearance for Typica is relatively small, relatively round. In Kenya and Tanzania, artificial hybrid breeding using Bourbon progeny resulted in the emergence of artificial new varieties "SL28" and "SL34", which are known for their excellent flavor performance. Bourbon has a higher seed yield than Typica, but the harvest period is also 2 years, which is also a variety with less yield.

Caturra species

A mutant of Bourbon. It was first discovered in Brazil and commercially cultivated in Minas Gerais, Brazil, in 1937. Caturra has a sour taste of lemon or citrus, and is not as sweet as Typica and Bourbon, because the sweetness of Caturra depends on the number and dosage of fertilizer applied by the grower. It has high productivity, but it must be continuously fertilized and pruned to maintain productivity, so the tree is short and branched. Although production capacity has increased, production is still limited due to the 2-year harvest period and high maintenance costs.

[Mundo Novo] Mundo Novo

Typica mixed with Bourbon. The trees are more than three meters tall, making it difficult to harvest. It lacks sweetness on the palate and has bitter aftertaste. Advantages are insect disease tolerance, high productivity, but high yield varieties.

Catuai

Caturra and Mundo novo cross species, Caturra tree short and Mundo novo tree tall, after mixing improved height is easier to harvest. Taste soso, sweetness performance similar to Cattura, fertilization technology has a great correlation. High planting density, proper fertilization can have high productivity, tree resistance, can resist wind and rain damage, short harvest period as long as 1 year, but the disadvantage is short life, only 10 years.

Maragogype

Typica variant. Found in Brazil at a place called Maragogype, beans are extremely large, hence the name elephant beans. It tastes mild and slightly sour, and it is not easy to bake. Light baking is recommended, because deep baking will not show the characteristics. Production is low.

Pacamara

Maragogype is interbred with Pacas and is considered a cousin of Maragogype.

Pacas

Caturra is interbred with Bourbon.

[Catimor] Catimo

Time is interbred with Caturra. It was discovered in Portugal in 1959. The taste is obvious and easy to distinguish, bitter acid with a little astringency, and the aftertaste is often salty. High planting density and resistance to leaf rust make it a high-yield variety. In the past, Catimor was grown extensively in Latin America on the advice of agricultural experts, who proved their advice wrong over a decade because coffee farmers could not sell their beans at the right price.

[Geisha] Geisha species

Geisha is a coffee species unique to Panama. In recent years, it has shined brilliantly in fine coffee. In just a few years, it has been called "Queen of Fine Coffee". It can be regarded as the treasure of Panama coffee. At present, the output is low and the price is high. Coffee farmers claim to have discovered it in recent years, but this is not the case. Geisha not only appeared in Panama as early as 1960, but many cultivation units in Panama also have many Geisha seeds. Willem Boot predicts a massive increase in Panamanian Geisha coffee in five years, and suggests roasters don't rush. It was discovered in 1931 in southwestern Ethiopia, where it is known by many different names, such as Gesha. In 1931 and 1932, it was imported into Kenya under the names Abyssinian and Geisha respectively. In 1936, Kenya sent its harvest of Geisha seeds to Uganda and Tanzania for planting. In July 1953 Tanzania sent progeny trees to Costa Rica, leaving the mother plants in its own country. In 1960, Geisha was officially cultivated through CATIE Panama. Geisha has a nice aroma, sweet and clean finish, character, fruity taste, with bright fruit acidity, such as tamarind, mango, papaya, very soft taste, characteristics can be compared with Ethiopian washed beans.

"Coffee variety" information in the early days is not easy to coffee users notice, often engaged in roasters or players will be slightly concerned, but not too deep, persistent, because the former is concerned about the price and sales channels, the latter focus on the improvement of roasting skills. The problem of "coffee variety" is most likely to be taken seriously by agriculturalists, botanists, coffee farmers, and coffee lovers who prefer specialty coffee. With the improvement of fine coffee culture in recent years, the number of home roasters is increasing day by day. Coffee trade is no longer just a business that can be played by large marketers. Gradually, small groups raise funds to buy green beans directly from the producing areas or join international green bean bidding activities. Coffee varieties are gradually attracting the attention of buyers.

This article is based on Willem Boot in Roast Magazine (May).| June 2006-Variety Is the Spice of Coffee. Because Willem Boot is a roaster himself, at the same time, he is also a lover of fine coffee. After the idea of buying land to grow coffee (I guess it should be to hire local coffee farmers to plant), he actually went to Panama to inspect and found that Panama is suitable for growing coffee regardless of temperature, rainfall, altitude, soil and other conditions. Therefore, Willem Boot's first question is no longer "Should I invest in buying land here?". It's,"What kind of coffee should I grow?" Because it takes at least three years for coffee trees to mature from seedling to harvest, any decision made now will affect the next three to five years, or even ten years, and you have to think carefully.

Coffee belongs to the evergreen shrub of the genus Coffea of Rubiaceae. There are about forty kinds of plants under the branch of Coffea, of which only three kinds of coffee have commercial value-Coffea Arabica, Coffea robusta and Coffea liberica. These three varieties are called "three original species of coffee". Arabica species account for about 70- 80% of the world's total production, and fine coffee is in large demand; Robusta species account for 20- 30%, mainly used for instant and canned coffee, and the caffeine content is twice that of Arabica species; Liberian species are not tolerant to leaf rust and have poor flavor. They are only traded domestically in Suriname, Libya, Cote d'Ivoire, etc. in West Africa, and are not popular all over the world.

Coffee is subject to many challenges during its growth, such as moisture, frost, pests, etc., among which "leaf rust" is the most harmful. All things in nature will evolve under natural selection, so does coffee tree. Therefore, the "Tibica species" and "Bourbon species" mentioned in this article belong to the "species" in the "kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus and species" of biological taxonomy, and can be classified into "subspecies","variety" and "variety" in descending order. Among them, there are mutant varieties that belong to natural evolution, and some are deliberately cultivated for special needs. The Arabica species commonly seen in the market are only very rough terms. The actual varieties are not subdivided, only that their upstream ancestors are Arabica species.

The following varieties evolved from Arabica species are introduced

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