Coffee review

Smooth and sweet Venezuelan coffee beans introduce boutique coffee

Published: 2024-11-03 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2024/11/03, Venezuelan coffee beans taste smooth and sweet. Compared with other coffee in Latin America, Venezuelan coffee is lighter, full-grained, sour, sweet and deep. Recently, a particularly interesting phenomenon has emerged in Venezuela's state-run coffee chain, the Venezuelan Cafe, which sells socialist coffee in Venezuela.

Venezuelan coffee beans

The taste is smooth and sweet. Compared with other coffee in Latin America, Venezuelan coffee is lighter, full-grained, sour, sweet and deep.

Venezuela sells "socialist" coffee in Venezuelan cafes.

Recently, there is a particularly interesting phenomenon in the Venezuelan Cafe, a state-run coffee chain in Venezuela: the store provides customers with two contrastive price lists. Each kind of coffee here has two prices of "socialism" and "capitalism". In this special way, cafes are intended to show customers the disadvantages of a free market and the benefits of regulating the economy.

At a Venezuelan Cafe in the center of Caracas, Venezuela's capital, the "socialist" price of a large cup of coffee on the menu is 2.5 Bolivar. In addition, the menu lists the "capitalist" price of the coffee sold elsewhere at 5 Bolivar (7.74 yuan). It is said that this is not only to provide discounted coffee to Venezuelans, but also to promote the left-wing politics of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.

The cafe's practice has won the support of many Venezuelan citizens, and the queue of guests has been extended to the road. Many people say they would be happier if the cafe offered more cheap coffee. "the cafe is a symbol of national policy and reflects the country's efforts to eliminate exploitation of the poor," said Kristobar Isturitz, a 70-year-old interior decorator who savoured coffee with friends on the patio. "

At the same time, critics argue that the Venezuelan Cafe and other similar measures are populist gimmicks that mask some of Venezuela's deep-seated economic problems. (Zhu Shun)

Caracas, Aug. 4-Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez announced on the 4th that the government is investigating the nationalization of two large coffee processing companies suspected of smuggling coffee to evade price monitoring.

Chavez said in a televised speech on the same day that as FAMA DE AMERICA and CAFE MADRID were suspected of buying coffee from Venezuelan farms at low prices and then smuggled to neighboring Colombia for high prices to evade Venezuelan price monitoring of necessities, the government was investigating. To nationalize them. It is reported that the government took over the two enterprises temporarily on the 3rd.

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