Coffee review

The sparsely produced Yemeni Madali mocha coffee sells for an average of $173 per pound.

Published: 2024-09-20 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2024/09/20, Coffee workshop (Wechat official account cafe_style) Yemeni mocha is one of the oldest coffees in the world. Yemeni mocha is considered to be the best coffee available to people in the world. It has a unique, aromatic, sour taste and a distinctive spicy taste. Yemeni mocha is the oldest in the world.

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Yemeni mocha is one of the oldest coffee in the world. Yemeni mocha is considered to be the best coffee available to people in the world. it is unique, fragrant, sour and distinctive spicy. "

Yemeni mocha is one of the oldest coffee in the world, but until recently, Yemeni mocha has come to be regarded as one of the best and most delicious coffee in the world. Mocha coffee, which has a long history, is synonymous with coffee. Its unique aroma and sour taste have deeply attracted many coffee lovers.

It is believed that most people have heard of the name even if they have never drunk mocha. But few people know that mocha coffee gets its name from the ancient country of coffee, the port of Mokha in Yemen.

There is a legend about how coffee was introduced into Yemen: "once a flock of big birds with ripe coffee fruits flew across the Red Sea and dropped them in Yemen, so coffee began to grow in Yemen."

In the 15th century, Arab countries still had a monopoly on coffee, so most of the coffee from Africa needed to be concentrated in the port of Mocha and then exported to places such as Europe, where the coffee exported was called mocha coffee.

Of course, the most authentic mocha refers to a single coffee from Yemen, which is one of the oldest coffee in the world. It is a fine suntan coffee, with deep chocolate flavor and sweet berry flavor highlighted by medium-deep roasting.

The lack of water makes it impossible for Yemen to use washing to treat coffee beans, so Yemen is the only full-day coffee producer in the world. Local farmers adopt the concept of free-range coffee cultivation and wait for the coffee fruit to fall off and dry naturally before collecting and processing. This also creates the unique wild flavor of Yemeni coffee.

Today, Yemen, where there are wars everywhere, is no longer the hub of the coffee world, but it is still the top coffee producer, still producing the world's most unique coffee beans. Mocha Mattari is one of the coffee beans that make coffee lovers crazy.

The sparsely produced Yemeni Madali mocha coffee (Mocha Mattari) sells for an average of $173a pound. The province of Bany Mattar, west of the Yemeni capital, follows the oldest tradition of coffee cultivation-planting coffee on steep terraces and planting poplars to provide shade for coffee seedlings to grow.

The sun-treated Mendalee mocha beans can show not only chocolate-like bitterness and sweetness, but also complex aromas such as red wine, tobacco and cinnamon, as well as long cream.

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