Coffee review

Introduction to the flavor and taste of San Pedro Manor in Puerto Rico

Published: 2025-08-21 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2025/08/21, The Caribbean Sea is a warm, romantic and mysterious sea, and a lot of good coffee is also around this ring sea, such as the Blue Mountains of Jamaica, Dominica, Crystal Mountain of Cuba, Yuko of Puerto Rico and so on. These are the most famous rare and expensive coffee in the world. These island beans give people a light smell of milk and elegant flowers, delicate and soft acidity, although it is still difficult to avoid coffee caused by the island's muggy climate.

The Caribbean Sea is a warm, romantic and mysterious sea, and a lot of good coffee is also around this ring sea, such as the Blue Mountains of Jamaica, the Dominica, the Crystal Mountains of Cuba, Yuko of Puerto Rico and so on. These are the most famous rare and expensive coffee in the world. These island beans give people a light milky aroma and elegant floral aroma, acidity and meticulous softness. Although it is still difficult to avoid the problem of easy water loss of coffee caused by the muggy climate of the island, the overall texture is one of the first-class beans in coffee. Puerto Rico coffee is not easy to buy on the market mainly because the output is less and mostly exported to Europe. Coupled with the adverse effects of severe weather hurricanes on coffee crops, there will be no coffee for the whole year. At that time, Puerto Rico's coffee bean production ranked sixth in the world. The fruit of the coffee trees planted by Corsican immigrants on the highlands is regarded as a selection, and the origin of Yauco Selecto coffee beans is mainly traced back to this period, but two severe hurricanes hit Puerto Rico in 1898. These two hurricanes destroyed the local coffee industry, and farmers had to wait two years to get the crops back to normal. During this period, the United States was very interested in Puerto Rico's sugar production. Coupled with the fact that European countries no longer impose tariffs on Puerto Rico coffee beans as crops produced by their colonies, it has dealt a heavy blow to Puerto Rico coffee. The whole history of Caribbean coffee has a lot to do with the reclamation of Spain. Coffee was not that important in the 18th century, and the main job was to grow sugar-producing crops on fertile valleys. In the early 19th century (1800), the residents of Corsica in the French Mediterranean moved to Puerto Rico because the valleys had been occupied by Spanish immigrants, so they chose to settle in the southwest mountains of the island, mostly near the city of Yuko. because of their efforts and determination, coffee cultivation brought them a good return, and they dominated the island's coffee industry in the 1860s.

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