Coffee review

Introduction of coffee producing areas in Uganda Ruwenzori (Ruwensori) in the west of Robart Coffee Bean

Published: 2024-11-03 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2024/11/03, In Uganda, the value of coffee is much more than a drink, it is an indispensable part of interpersonal communication. The coffee beans are wrapped in banana leaves and roasted over the fire to make a food called Mpokoto, which is very much like Chinese zongzi. David took out some coffee beans for me to chew and taste together. David explained that chewing coffee beans is a symbol of the relationship between people and the instrument of relationship building.

In Uganda, the value of coffee is much more than a drink, it is an indispensable part of interpersonal communication. The coffee beans wrapped in banana leaves are roasted over the fire to make a food called "Mpokoto", which is very much like Chinese zongzi. David took out some coffee beans for me to chew and taste together. David explained that chewing coffee beans is a symbol of the relationship between people, the relationship-building ceremony. Business partnerships often start with the aroma of coffee.

I asked Soloman, how do Chinese tourists feel when they arrive in Uganda? He replied, "after only a few days in Uganda, they miss Chinese food thousands of miles away." There are new Chinese restaurants in Uganda every year. " Mellow coffee beans are shipped to China, and exquisite Chinese food is delivered to Uganda. What a great cultural exchange in order to improve the quality and reduce the cost of coffee, Uganda cancelled the exclusive right to operate the Coffee Business Council (Coffee Marketing Board, referred to as CMB) in November 1990. Most of the work originally undertaken by the Coffee Management Committee has now been handed over to the cooperative organization. Privatized coffee accounts for 2% of the country's export revenue, so the government imposes a tax on coffee shops, hoping to increase much-needed revenue. But instead, coffee exports fell by 20%, and coffee smuggling became more and more serious.

Like Tanzania, the rise in coffee prices in recent years has encouraged farmers to return to their estates and reclaim once-abandoned land to grow coffee, and the Ugandan coffee industry looks promising.

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