Basic knowledge of Coffee blending introduction to Coffee blending
The main commercial purpose of blending coffee is to reduce costs and mix coffee with coffee that is not very good. In order to improve sales profits. There is also a possible purpose, that is to put together a unique taste, the unique taste of a brand. Customers who like this taste have to go to this factory to buy it, but can't get it from other suppliers. Another advantage of this is that the taste of the blended coffee will not change no matter how the taste of the coffee from different years changes in some places.
We are here to ignore other possible commercial purposes and concentrate on understanding the blending for the purpose of improving the taste and quality of the coffee.
Before blending any coffee, you should first understand the taste characteristics of all kinds of coffee, and at least make it clear in your heart that the taste of the kind of coffee you want to mix can not be achieved by any single coffee. It would be a pity if the blended coffee doesn't taste better than one or more of them. It would be better not to match. If you use some pretty good quality coffee for blending, the result is likely to be so.
The average blended coffee does not need to use more than five kinds of coffee beans. Because if there are too many kinds of coffee beans, the situation can be very complicated. Almost only a very special expert would not be confused by so many different coffee beans. People need to put coffee from different places together for several different purposes. The ideal goal, of course, is to piece together a coffee that tastes better than any of them. But generally speaking, Arabica coffee from a single origin is enough to make coffee that tastes good for export; it has a delicate flavor, a soft taste and a sweet aftertaste. So there is no need to "mix" (that is, to combine coffee from different places)
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Introduction to the treatment of Yega Snow Coffee beans in the Eastern Highlands
One of the rarest Ethiopian coffee beans on the market is Yirgachaffe, which is exported to Japan and Europe but is rarely seen in the United States. This is because Dallmeyer, a German coffee roaster owned by Nestle, has established a close relationship with the growers of Yega Snow Coffee, thus obtaining the largest kind of coffee beans.
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Can individual coffee be mixed? can you introduce the types of coffee that can be mixed?
Since it is a blending, it naturally refers to the blending of more than two kinds of raw beans, but a special example is that the same kind of coffee beans with different roasting degrees can be matched together, or even the new crop and aged coffee or old crop of the same kind of coffee beans can be matched together, so the type referred to in the blending is no longer a coffee variety in a narrow sense, but extended to coffee in a broad sense.
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