Coffee review

Ecuador Coffee Plantation Flavor Taste Introduction Santa Cruz Plantation

Published: 2024-11-05 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2024/11/05, Famous brand in South America, Ecuadorian A-class coffee, with state-owned large-scale seed garden;100% produced from 1300-2000 meters of natural vegetation in the highlands, popular in Europe and America, to taste the exquisite world-class Arabica Arabica flavor at supermarket prices. ES coffee is a clean organic coffee grown on the slopes of the Latin American Andes. It's 100% pure coffee, and through hard work

The famous South American brand, Ecuadorian Grade A coffee, has a large state-run seed value garden; 100% is produced in the natural vegetation zone of 1300-2000 meters highland, popular in Europe and the United States, and tastes exquisite world-class Arabica Arabica flavor at supermarket prices.

ES Coffee is a clean organic coffee grown on the slopes of the Andes in Latin America. It is 100% pure coffee, and the quality of our coffee has been guaranteed and improved by working to improve the economic and working conditions of the plantation, while maintaining the small scale of the coffee plantation and the biodiversity in the hospital. In addition, it is one of the very important economic sources of coffee origin, because it is all dried and packaged locally, which ensures that it is a very unique kind of coffee in the world! At the same time, it also ensures its unique taste due to the unique role of the Galapagos Islands in the course of history, the Ecuadorian government has designated the Galapagos Islands as a national park and no longer allows the land to be reclaimed as new agricultural land. and the introduction and use of chemical fertilizers, pesticides, herbicides and other chemicals are strictly prohibited, so the coffee produced in the Galapagos Islands is recognized as a natural product consumed by people all over the world. The world coffee industry is also moving towards mass production, while St. Cristobal, a small and unreliable coffee industry, is in trouble and is likely to be forced to give up without profit. It wasn't until the early 1990s that the Gonzalez family bought Hasunda Coffee Park. The localized microclimate caused by the Humboldt current (HumboldtCurrent), strong equatorial sunlight and sharp temperature changes (43 ℃ at sea level and 10 ℃ to 16 ℃ above sea level) provided advantageous conditions that prompted the Gonzalez family to expand their coffee plantation. By reclaiming the early land, the Gonzalez family doubled the area of the coffee plantation.

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