Coffee review

Introduction to Papua New Guinea Coffee with full grains and moderate acidity

Published: 2024-09-17 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2024/09/17, The coffee beans of Papua New Guinea are processed washed Arabica beans with a taste similar to the bright notes of Central and South America, with obvious sour aromas, sometimes orange, flower and fruit, slightly spicy and chocolate, and long-lasting sweet aromas of caramel. Flavor reference: refreshing herbaceous and floral aromas, tenderness of Central and South American beans, slightly sour, fruity, sticky

The coffee beans of Papua New Guinea are processed washed Arabica beans with a taste similar to the bright notes of Central and South America, with obvious sour aromas, sometimes orange, flower and fruit, slightly spicy and chocolate, and long-lasting sweet aromas of caramel.

Flavor reference: refreshing herbaceous and floral aroma, inclined to the tonality of Central and South American beans, slightly sour, fruity, sticky, full taste, subtle aroma and complexity. sometimes the acid value and brightness are even comparable to those of the top coffee beans in Central America: full grains, moderate acidity and mellow taste.

Papua New Guinea is an island country in Oceania. In Malay, "Papua" means "curly hair". It is said that in 1545, the explorer Retes arrived on the island and found that most of the people's hair on the island was curly, that is, the island was called "the island of curly hair", so the name was handed down.

Located in tropical Papua New Guinea, the climate is humid and rainy, rich in coconuts and coffee. Forests and mineral resources are also rich. Rabur is the sixth largest town in the South Pacific island nation and an important shipping hub. Its rich coffee and other goods are exported from this port.

Papua New Guinea has a detached and primitive natural environment and its land is vast and fertile. Its unique volcanic rock soil and abundant rainfall create excellent natural conditions for the growth of coffee. The top coffee beans in Papua New Guinea are as beautiful and precious as the country's national bird of paradise. As coffee is widely grown in the highlands of 1300 to 1800 meters above sea level, coffee beans have plump grains, varied tastes, pleasant acidity and fruit-like sweetness.

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