How to deal with the processing of kotowa Manor beans in Panama? what is the grade of kotowa Manor beans?
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Panama Finca Kotowa of Cotova Manor, Panama
The founder of the manor: Alexander. Duncan. McIntyre, originally Canadian, has a very important political position in his hometown, but has a strong desire for change in a busy and vibrant life. One day in 1918, he read a report about Pocket in Panama in Central America. The report details that there is a secret place near the mysterious volcanic slope that is cool all the year round. So his curiosity drove him to Poquet. Unexpectedly, he fell in love with the local people of Poquet and the dreamy valley here, so Alexander. Duncan. McIntyre decided to settle down here. Up to now, the Alexander family, which has experienced four generations, has grown coffee in the traditional way and is proud of the boutique coffee they have planted with their heart. Ricardo Koyner is the current manor operator.
Cordova Manor is located in the Pokuit producing area of Panama, 1700-1850 meters above sea level. The manor has a strong social and environmental awareness. In order to ensure a clean, safe and sustainable environment, the manor grows and handles coffee with traditional concepts but with the latest technology. Therefore, 500 hectares of virgin forest is specially reserved as a wildlife reserve. The manor has four main planting areas, namely Finca Kotowa DUNCAN, Finca Kotowa DON K, Finca Kotowa R and O CRISTAL and Finca Kotowa TRADICIONAL. One more planting area has been added in the past two years. Finca Kotowa LAS BRUJAS is also a very good area in the competition for the best Panama in the past two years. During the harvest season, Cordova Manor chooses to plant red coffee fruits and treat them with clear and cool mountain spring water. Under the concept of environmental protection, they use only half a liter of water per pound of coffee, which saves about 10 to 20 litres compared with other treatment plants. However, the treated pulp and waste water are also reused as organic fertilizers. Finally, in 1700 Michael's cold, dry climate, slowly and naturally dry.
Cotova Manor Don K Sun Finca Kotowa Don K Natural
■ country: Panama
■ producing area: Boquette
■ altitude: 1700 m
■ treatment: insolation
■ level: SHB
■ varieties: Kaddura, Kadoui
■ flavor description: black jujube, walnut, vanilla, Body thick, clean
Cotova Manor Witch Geisha Sun Finca Kotowa Las Brujas Geisha Natural
■ country: Panama
■ producing area: Boquette
■ altitude: 1700 m
■ treatment: insolation
■ level: SHB
■ breed: geisha
■ flavor description: passion fruit, peach, citrus, strawberry
Product name: Panamanian Poquet Duncan Manor Dwarf Sun Geisha half pound 1200 yuan per pound 2100 yuan (shallow bake # 2, medium bake # 3)
(Panama Boquete Duncan "The Dwarft" Geisha Natural)
Producing area: Pokuit producing area of Chiriki province (Chirqui) (Boquete)
Producer: Duncan, owned by the Kotowa family
Variety: geisha (Geisha)
Altitude: 1700 m
Treatment: insolation
Precipitation: 1900 mm. From May every year to January of the following year
Temperature: 13 °C and 22 °C
Flavor features: floral notes, lemon, orange, apricot, complex aromas
Crisp and sweet acidity, syrup taste.
Award record:
The best Panama (BOP) sun brothel group ranked 4th in 2015, and the traditional variety suntan group ranked 6th.
The 5th and 7th best BOP geisha in Panama in 2014, and the 5th and 15th in the water-washed geisha group.
The number 4 in the traditional variety sun exposure group and the 3rd and 5th place in the traditional variety washing group.
2013 best Panama BOP sun geisha group No. 3, water washing geisha group No. 14
The traditional variety was ranked 4th in the sun exposure group and 7th in the traditional variety washing group.
In 2012, the champion of the best Panamanian BOP sun geisha group, the 6th in the water washing geisha group.
The number 6 in the traditional variety sunbathing group and the 1st and 3rd place in the traditional variety washing group.
Cordova KOTOWA
Cordova KOTOWA comes from the language of Ng ä be, a native Indian: it means mountains. The coffee beans of Cordova Manor are grown in the beautiful mountains of Poquet, Panama, and are produced by local people in a traditional way.
Witch LAS BRUJAS
Las Brujas means witch. The name comes from the stream in the park, which appears and disappears from the groundwater system. The flow of the stream in the underground tunnel causes waves of howling, which is thought to be from a witch living in the forest.
The prestigious Kotowa Manor, located in the Boquete district of Panama, was founded by Mr. Alexander Duncan MacIntyre of Canada in 1913. At present, it is managed by the fourth-generation manor owner Ricardo Koyner.
The word Kotowa comes from the local aboriginal language, which means that the [mountain, mountain] manor is in an excellent location, in addition to the appropriate high altitude, coupled with the border between the Caribbean and the Pacific, the sea breeze blows all the year round, creating a delicate climate. In addition, the vast primitive protection forest around the manor provides the humidity and temperature for the natural growth of coffee trees, exquisite harvesting and post-stage treatment to ensure the high quality of coffee. No wonder the coffee of Kotowa Manor is always at the top of the competition for the best coffee in Panama.
The batch of washed Geisha we bought this time comes from one of the four farms on the manor, the organically grown Don K area. This is a fine Geisha coffee, dry aroma is very obvious and delicate aromas of berries and jasmine. The wet aroma of berries is more obvious, honey, citrus, elegant floral aromas.
The performance of the cup is very sweet, very sweet and juicy, like a cup of super sweet juice-very pleasant citrus flavor, light and mild lemon flavor, plus elegant and delicate floral aroma, mild and bright acidity, delicate and solid taste-very charming, this time we talked about a very favorable price feedback to all sweet friends, don't miss it! --
Producing area: Poquet Valley
□ producer: kotowa Manor
□ altitude: 1350 Murray 1450
□ variety: Kaddura
□ treatment: Huangmi
□ flavor description: sweet citrus, honey, toffee, dark chocolate, rich aroma, sweet and greasy taste …
□ Panama is located at the junction of North and South America, facing the Pacific Ocean on the left and the Atlantic Ocean on the right, so it has an important position as a bridge between the two oceans and occupies the key to this geography. Since it became a Spanish colony in 1501, it began to build the famous "Panama Canal" until it was completed in 1914, because adjacent Costa Rica,Panama has many similarities with Costa Rica in the classification and even treatment of coffee beans. Every year, Panama has two important events affecting the international coffee industry, namely, the famous "Best of Panama" and "Geisha" bidding. Chiriqu, Chiriki province is now the concentration area of Panamanian boutique coffee, and Boquete and Volcan next to the Baru volcano are particularly famous, because of the four distinct seasons, fertile and mineral-rich volcanic soil, high terrain, annual rainfall of up to 3500mm, very suitable for Arabica coffee tree growth.
Panama. KOTOWA Manor
□ Kotowa Manor is a famous coffee estate in Panama. It was founded by Mr. Alexander Duncan MacIntyre of Canada in 1913 and is now run by the fourth generation landowner Ricardo Koyner. (Ricardo owns three kotowa,Duncan,Don K estates, all of which are very important coffee farms in Panama and are the victorious army of BOP;Best of Panama every year.) The word Kotowa comes from the local aboriginal language, which means "mountain". The location of the manor is excellent, in addition to the appropriate high altitude, coupled with the location at the junction of the Caribbean Sea and the Pacific Ocean, the year-round sea breeze creates a unique micro-climate. In addition, the vast primitive protection forest around the manor provides the humidity and temperature for the natural growth of coffee trees, exquisite harvesting and post-stage treatment to ensure the high quality of coffee. As a result, Kotowa Manor is always at the top of the annual Panama Best Coffee Competition (BOP).
Manor close-up: a real boutique coffee manor
Panama Kotowa Geisha (Kotwa Manor Geisha, Panama)
Said to be in place at Kotowa Manor in Boquete (Poquet Valley).
Most coffee people will brighten their eyes!
And this is also the friends of Lianjie Coffee.
Favorite Panamanian manor!
First, let's take a look at its excellent competition results, not only winning awards year after year.
Just look at BOP (Best of Panama) in the last five years.
Regardless of whether the year is divided into two groups / three groups / four groups
The army of Kotowa is able to have a large binary / triple / quadruple land.
There are award-winning batches in each category every year.
It's really good enough!
Actually, in Kotowa Don K, Duncan, Las Brujas...
Behind the legend, there is a real coffee man--
Ricardo-Koyan (Ricardo Koyner)
He inherited his mother's grandfather
Alexander du Jian (Alexandar Duncan)
A coffee garden founded in 1917
And the washing plant built by Grandpa Don K...
However, Panamanian coffee was still unknown at that time.
Not only the geisha coffee tree is also waiting for people to explore.
Many beans of high quality
In the United States in the 1990s, she was disguised as Kona of Hawaii.
Innocently involved in the most famous coffee fraud in history...
At the same time, the price of coffee futures in New York has fallen year after year after the end of the Cold War.
The prospect of running a coffee farm was actually very bad at that time--
But Ricardo, who has a college degree in economics, knows very well
Kotowa Manor only produces the highest quality raw beans.
To get rid of the shackles of futures prices.
Only in this way can we have the basis for sustainable operation and even carry forward.
So, he embarked on the road of boutique coffee.
Unlike many "farmers" who own large tracts of land and farm labourers to produce coffee.
He is the owner of the "most peasant" coffee garden we have ever seen:
When we visited him for the first time, it was already night after the cup test round
Just when I was sorry that I didn't have a chance to actually go for a walk in his coffee garden.
He offered to take us to Don K and Duncan at six o'clock the next morning!
He said you're welcome, that's when he often goes up to see the coffee garden--
These two coffee plantations are on both sides of the same mountain line.
Is named in memory of his great-grandfather and grandfather.
It was the land he bought later under his management.
It used to be the production park of Kotowa Manor's flagship products.
1700 meters above sea level
Rely on Mount Volcan Baru, which belongs to the west side of the valley.
On the edge line, there is a sunny area planned as a high-altitude bean drying farm.
Responsible for handling all high-altitude sun-dried and washed beans--
The rest are hillsides covered with Kaddura (Caturra).
With Catuai...
But the Lingxian platform at the highest altitude is full of famous varieties of geisha!
Although the two adjacent gardens are not certified, the whole garden is cultivated organically:
The Bidens bipinnata which has not yet been hoed to shoulder height will pierce you all over the grass.
A shade tree three stories high emits the hum of ten thousand bees!
It turned out that the tree was in full bloom, and all the bees nearby came to collect honey--
It shows the richness of ecological resources.
Ricardo picked red ripe geisha berries and gave them to us to taste.
And the flesh should be mixed in the mouth.
Intense aromas of passion fruit / litchi / pineapple!
Just when the flavor of Baiguo drifted away in the nasal cavity
He took us close to one plant after another.
Next to a slightly different geisha tree, he said to us
"this is the fruit with longer seeds, and there is a mutant with a yellow pericarp over there."
Makes me wonder-- he seems to know every coffee tree.
And know exactly where they are?!
The most interesting thing is
When I met a harvester who asked for a group photo
Ricardo asked me to take a picture of him with the collector first!
Then there is a picture of me and the collector.
--I have never seen such a people-friendly coffee maker!
When asked about the relationship between altitude and coffee quality, is it absolute?
Ricardo said "At least in Poquet Valley, that's for sure! "
That's why it's already on the east side of the valley below Jaramillo.
At an altitude of 1350 meters, there are large coffee gardens,
And buy this land at a higher altitude...
But I also saw Ricardo trying to move on to fine coffee,
The precision of judgment and the effort that followed!
Thus, when coffee futures bottomed out in 2,
(At one point futures were trading at 50 cents a pound, less than half what they are today!)
Panamanian coffee is poised to rise--
Ricardo was working with others like Wilford, Elida Manor,
Francisco of Don Pachi Manor,
Daniel and Rachel of Esmeralda Estate
... a group of excellent Panamanian coffee owners,
First, they launched the Panama Coffee Association (SCAP),
Share and learn from each other about planting and treatment techniques
Then hold BOP competitions...
In just a few years, it has attracted the attention of many fine coffee lovers.
Then came the dazzling geisha coffee,
It has become famous and sought after all over the world!
Not only is this not a fluke at all,
More is silent effort and open-minded sharing and learning!
As the core and leading coffee garden,
Kotowa also quickly received a gift of geisha seeds from Esmeralda.
Into the ranks of Geisha coffee production and technological improvements…
It's like a sun treatment that SCAA experts don't like.
Just a few short years to become another dazzling star!
Today Ricardo not only delves into the origins of the many forms of geisha,
In collaboration with UC Davis, a leading agricultural research center in the United States,
Want to know more about the secrets of geisha producing good taste!
In recent years, he has also thrown down heavy books,
Buy a piece up to 1850--1900 meters,
Las Brujas, a coffee garden on the side of Baru Volcano…
And interesting local surface potholes due to rapid changes in groundwater levels,
And drought and water, strong wind blowing more whining sound
As if witches were hiding in the woods...
So they named it Brujas in Spanish--
This is especially rare in Poquet Valley where land prices are getting more expensive!!
(More often than not, farmers prefer to sell land for large sums of cash at once,
Then enjoy a luxurious life like winning the lottery!)
But he said it was worth it! Because of the higher altitude,
to take the geisha to the next level--
The only downside is that coffee trees grow slowly because it's cold,
The rate of increase in production is also relatively slow...
And so the geisha of Witcher's Manor, still fairly rare--
He also continued to devote himself to upgrading the manor's technology:
for example, regarding the "new sheller" specially designed for sun-baked beans,
This is because the general hulling machine is designed for washing beans,
Sun-dried raisin-like husks stick and pile up inside the machine,
Cause shelling machine intense friction heat, hot touch on the hand burns!
Such heat is definitely harmful to coffee beans,
Especially the higher the altitude, the thicker the berry flesh, the bigger the trouble!
New sun-dried bean husking machine, in addition to not easy to accumulate dry shell
Specially designed air-cooled pipes and powerful blowers…
All in order to completely solve the hot bean crisis when the sun beans are shelled-
Also, he recently invested in two sets of "circulating dry and cold dryers,"
Circulating compressed air with precise control of relative humidity
Dry the shelled beans slowly in a closed dryer system,
Completely avoid exposure of green beans to higher temperatures when drying--
Drying below 37 degrees Celsius is considered ideal,
But Ricardo's two new toys can work below 20 degrees Celsius!
As for the question of how effective it was? He then said with a slightly sly tone:
"Maybe it's working, maybe it hasn't been tested yet-"
Also, about preserving raw beans…
He generously opened the warehouse dedicated to storing high-quality raw beans_
Small room, piled up two stories high-suddenly see an air conditioner in operation!
This is the first time I've seen someone using an air conditioning system to preserve raw beans at the origin!!
(Of course, when I saw some of the same hairy people later,
It's not weird either!)
Also, he is testing several wet/dry fermentation washing methods,
And get a lot of key principles to improve quality…
And…
Maybe we can't fully understand what's going on in Poquette Valley
All the details of how to produce better coffee! Actually,
These details are still being understood and improved every day.
But the only thing we understand is that a good cup of coffee is hard to come by:
Starting with the green beans, it's that mountain/that group of trees/that group of people…
We worked hard together!
To our hands, from preservation/baking/grinding/brewing/tasting…
So what a privilege to be together on the road to the fine coffee industry,
stride forward--
Name: Kotewa Manor Sunburn/Wash Geisha
Produced by Ricardo Koyner
Region: Boquete Valley
Altitude: Duncan 1700 m
Las Brujas (Witches/Witches) 1850 m
Breed: Geisha (Geisha)
Production season: October 2014-April 2015
Treatment: sun or water treatment
Awards: *BOP awards are too numerous (this batch is not a bidding batch)
Panama Panama
Population: 3406000
Coffee in Panama is defined by how it is produced, not by geography. In the past, when coffee was widely cultivated, when the areas listed below were small and densely clustered, the beans produced could be combined into a unit.
BOQUETE
The Bok region is the most famous Panamanian region. Its mountainous terrain creates many microclimates. Cooler weather and frequent fogs help slow coffee cherry ripening, and some believe this is akin to high-altitude climates.
Altitude: 400- 1,900 m
Harvest: December-March
Breeds: Typica, Caturra, Catuai, Bourbon, Geisha, San Ramon
VOLCAN-CANDELA
Candela Volcano This area produces most of Panama's food and some amazing coffee. The region is named after Baru volcano and the city of Piedra Candela, and borders Costa Rica.
Altitude: 1,200- 1,600 m Harvest: December-March
Breeds: Typica, Caturra, Catuai, Bourbon, Geisha, San Ramon
RENACIMIENTO
Renacimiento is a region in the province of Chiriqui, bordering Costa Rica. The area itself is relatively small, so it is not Panama's main specialty coffee producing area.
Altitude: 1,100- 1,500 m
Harvest: December-March
Breeds: Typica, Caturra, Catuai, Bourbon, Geisha, San Ramon
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How is the planting of single bean at kotowa Manor in Panama? kotowa Manor single bean won the prize.
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