Introduction to Los Congo Manor in Nicaragua Coffee Manor
The Lemon Tree Manor is located in the YasicaNorte region of Nicaragua and is managed by SantosDemitrio Flores. The planting area of coffee is 171ha, the size of the nature reserve is 77 ha, the elevation is between 850m and 1150 m, and the average annual temperature is 20-28C.
The manor mainly grows Kaddura, Java, Pagmara and yellow Pagmara. The picking period of coffee lasts from December to February, which is usually treated by the combination of dry fermentation and water washing. This batch of Javanese species is treated in such a way, with both flower aroma and fruit acid, and a strong sense of sweetness.
The manor is one of the COE award-winning regulars and has won the Nepal COE award for two consecutive years from 2007 to 2008.
Florence processing plant
The Florence processing plant is located in Ocotal Nueva Segovia in northern Nicaragua, where the climate is very suitable for the cultivation and treatment of high-quality coffee, coupled with high altitude reasons, the quality of the coffee processed by the processing plant is excellent in Nicaragua. The "Especial" batch is a boutique coffee specially selected by the processing factory from many coffees.
The two Nicaraguan coffees we purchased this time are both Javanese, but the difference is that they are treated in different ways, so we can horizontally compare the differences in different treatments of coffee of the same tree species. I hope you like the estate located in the Aserri area of South San Jose, very close to Tarazu, is an excellent coffee growing area, coffee cherries can be very evenly ripe, almost free of fungal diseases. The manor has just completed the installation and operation of its own microprocessing plant equipment in recent years. The manor is named "three Sisters Manor" after its three beautiful daughters Yenixa,Jocelyn and Yerlin. The entire Gamboa family, including father, mother and daughter, are involved in the operation of the estate, from coffee picking, screening to processing. If you have the opportunity to visit the manor, you will be moved by a family for a common and simple purpose-to improve the quality of coffee through dedicated and honest efforts to improve their lives and to devote themselves to the family business.
When asked Yenixa, the eldest daughter, that they expected to achieve their goal by setting up their own microprocessing plant, Yenixa replied modestly, confidently and firmly: "our microprocessing plant cost about $15000, which is a huge investment for our family, but we feel that this is what we need to do to improve the quality of our coffee and have a bright future and provide a better education for my two sisters. In addition, we want our coffee to be purer rather than mixed with hundreds of farmers' raw beans in Volcafe's processing plant. With our new microprocessing plant, we will be able to provide pure single-source boutique coffee raw beans from our estate. We know that the quality of our coffee is very good, and we want the world to know that these 1.3 sister estates
The three Sisters Manor is currently owned by Don Miguel Gamboa, a boutique coffee raw bean grower who owns a small coffee farm and previously sold his coffee cherries to the Volcafe Group's local processing plant to process the raw beans. Two or three years ago, Don Miguel and his family decided that it was time to set up their own processing plant to deal with the hard-harvested crystals and to process and sell raw coffee beans in the name of their own estate.
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Introduction to Joy Manor, the coffee producing area of Nicaragua, where washed Arabica beans are produced.
In February this year, I joined a delegation of Nicaraguan coffee buyers. Over the past nine years, I occasionally visited the coffee-producing areas of Nicaragua, but this time, I felt the sinister impact that the Nicaraguan coffee industry is facing. The persistently depressed coffee prices have a serious impact on the Nepalese economy, but even with such obstacles, people in this place still hold.
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Introduction to the taste of Nicaraguan lemon manor with fruit flavor
Nicaragua is an economically backward agricultural country, is one of the poorest countries in Central America, the unemployment rate is very high, people live in poverty, and coffee is Nicaragua's pillar industry, producing nearly 100,000 tons of coffee beans every year. Due to the poor economic foundation, the coffee industry is still relatively backward, and coffee farmers are also in a relatively poor state. Although Nicaragua is a large part of Central America,
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