Coffee review

Colombia HUILA is recognized as the best coffee with heavy bitterness and moderate acidity.

Published: 2024-09-20 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2024/09/20, Specialty coffee is also known as specialty coffee. It refers to coffee made from green beans with excellent taste characteristics grown in a few extremely ideal geographical environments. Depending on the particular soil and climatic conditions in which they are grown, they have outstanding flavors. This type of coffee is carefully selected and graded for its hard texture, rich taste and wind.

Boutique coffee (specialty coffee) is also called "specialty coffee" or "select coffee". It refers to coffee made from a small number of raw beans with excellent taste grown in an ideal geographical environment. Depending on the special soil and climatic conditions in which they grow, they have outstanding flavor. After strict selection and classification, this kind of coffee can be regarded as a selection of coffee beans because of its hard texture, rich taste and excellent flavor.

Columbia coffee Supremo grade HUILA Huilan producing area, specification: 17-18 mesh, grade: Supremo, origin: Colombia HUILA Huilan Huilahuila, technology: washing.

Features:

1. Taste: bitter, moderate acidity, rich aroma

2. The best baking degree is moderate.

3. Matching method: single product drinking or matching

Huilan of Colombia (Colombia huila is also transliterated as Huilahuila) is one of the top boutiques in Colombia. Its balance is recognized as the best coffee, belonging to the Colombian State Corporation's selected alpine coffee beans, known as the Colombian national treasure.

With its superior geographical and climatic conditions, Colombian coffee has always maintained high quality. Colombian coffee beans, which usually do not have a special market trademark, are from the National Coffee Farmers' Union of Colombia (national federation of colombia coffee growers), a very large alliance that spans Colombia. It has always been famous for its strict quality control and active promotion.

In the Colombian coffee bean grading system, supremo is the highest grade, with the largest and fullest grains in Colombian coffee beans, with very few defective beans and sundries, while excelso is the smaller, more common grade. Colombian coffee has a balanced flavor, rich acidity, unique flavor characteristics, relatively full consistency, sometimes with a touch of red wine flavor and admirable fruit flavor. In Colombia, a small portion of coffee comes from the old Tibica or bourbon, which is generally branded by the name of the manor or the name of the processing factory.

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