Coffee review

KENYA Kenya Burashen roasted coffee beans taste good _ how do Kenyan coffee beans roast?

Published: 2024-11-03 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2024/11/03, Professional coffee knowledge exchange more coffee bean information Please follow the coffee workshop (Wechat official account cafe_style) in recent years, more and more people love coffee, and they know more and more about the taste, aroma and other aspects of coffee. In the past, we must have heard the older generation always say: coffee must not be sour! Coffee is shoddy as long as it is sour! one

Professional coffee knowledge exchange more coffee bean information please follow the coffee workshop (Wechat official account cafe_style)

In recent years, more and more people like to drink coffee, and they also know more and more about the taste, aroma and other aspects of coffee. In the past, we must have heard the older generation always say, "Coffee must not be sour!" "as long as coffee is sour, it is shoddy coffee!" The same kind of words. Of course, looking back from the current point of view, "sour coffee = inferior coffee" has long been an impractical and incorrect concept. On the contrary, more and more coffee fans have begun to prefer coffee with acidity, and even can't do without sour coffee from now on. Women, in particular, have a higher acceptance of acid. Of course, this may also be due to the relationship between time and space, the early coffee refining technology is not as modern, the source is not transparent, perhaps mixed with bad flavor, unpicked beans and roasted into medium-shallow roasting, of course, the bad taste is more likely to be drunk clearly. In recent years, the popularity of boutique coffee (Note 1) has begun to promote the simple taste of black coffee, and pay more and more attention to the sour, fragrant, sweet, mellow and other flavors of coffee itself. On the contrary, the word "sour coffee" has become a representative of coffee taste.

Kenyan coffee is most famous for its adorable sour taste. Let's get to know today's protagonist: Kenya AA!

Coffee introduction

Africa has always been one of the best coffee producers in the world, and is famous all over the world for its charming acidity and aroma, and Kenya is certainly not absent. Kenya is a big coffee country in East Africa and one of the most important and irreplaceable producers, next to the Republic of Ethiopia, the original place of coffee in the world. Coffee farmers are generally highly educated, studying fine agriculture and growing top coffee. Coffee producers in Kenya are mainly divided into two types, the first type is large estates, and the other is the so-called "small farmers". However, whether they are large coffee farms or small farmers, the coffee beans produced by them have been refined, the vast majority will be transported to the official Kenyan coffee shop for unified grading identification. The coffee bureau will first send samples of the coffee beans to be auctioned to interested buyers for trial, and hold an auction every Tuesday at the Nairobi Coffee Exchange Coffee Exchange in Nairobi, the capital of Kenya. Through a transparent auction mechanism and a dual-system parallel approach of official sales agents and independent sales agents, foreign buyers can also directly negotiate with corresponding producers to buy coffee. There is no need to go through the official auction board, so producers' hard work can be rewarded more fairly and equitably, without being exploited by the brokers in the middle. Because of this, coffee farmers are more willing to try their best to produce high-quality coffee beans in order to sell at a good price.

The coffee grading system in Kenya is distinguished by AA-Plus (AA+), AA and AB, which refers to the uniformity of the particle size of coffee beans, rather than the quality of coffee. High-quality Kenyan coffee beans are commonly grown between 4200 and 6800 feet (1300-2100 meters) above sea level. The Kenyan AA Kaguyu introduced this time is refined by the Tika processing Plant, which has a history of at least 92 years in central Kenya. Located in the Aberdare Mountains of central Kenya, the town of Tika is more than 1800 meters above sea level. Due to the influence of high altitude, the temperature does not exceed 27 degrees even during the day, and the low temperature falls around 15 degrees, which is quite suitable for the climate of coffee trees.

Note 1: boutique coffee (Specialty Coffee) can also be called selected coffee, exquisite coffee, the original text should mean "special, specially selected" coffee, "boutique" gives people the impression of being good-looking, but it may be due to the influence of the trend in recent years that the word "boutique" can give people a high-level impression as long as anything is worn on it. Therefore, at present, the domestic mainstream is still commonly known as "boutique coffee" rather than "refined coffee, select coffee". Personally, I think that the next two names should be more in line with the spirit of this kind of coffee, and the price of "boutique coffee" is actually not high. Coffee should be a kind of people-friendly drink that everyone can afford. The word "boutique" seems to be equated with expensive boutiques such as LV and Chanel.

I tested the beans with about 400g raw beans, baked them slowly with two stages of firepower in Japanese style, baked moderately slightly and slightly deep (about one dense near the tail section), and then grinded them with Feima brand bean grinder scale 5 for moderate grinding and hand extraction. The acidity of the first mouthful into the throat is really obvious! It is filled with the bright acidity of Kenyan coffee, but it is not the acid that makes people bite cold shoots and numb their scalp. Body is thick, with a hint of Yega Chuefei's floral and orange smell. The sour feeling of sipping the coffee into the throat quickly turns sour to sweet, making one can't help but try a few more mouthfuls one after another. The creamy flavor slowly spreads in the mouth after drinking the coffee, and there is a touch of black sugar sweetness, very fresh berry aroma, very delicious! Even when brewing in the office, colleagues who are not drinking coffee can't help saying, "Wow!" Your coffee has a very different flavor today! " It's really a good nose, awesome! The dry aroma of deep-roasted Kenyan coffee has a hint of creamy sweetness, dark chocolate and a hint of cardamom, while the wet aroma has aromas of tea, red wine and grease. The palate is thick and full-bodied, with a smooth grease texture and a hint of red wine after a cold finish.

Kenyan coffee is also quite suitable for ice drop coffee or chilled coffee, the flavor and taste are excellent, hot summer is coming, would you like a cup of iced coffee? Why don't you try the Kenyan AA that is guaranteed to make you yell!

END

0