Coffee review

Rich floral flavor of Ethiopian coffee the characteristics of the manor area introduce high-quality coffee beans

Published: 2024-11-10 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2024/11/10, Ethiopian coffee has the highest citrus aroma in the world. Whether instant coffee or freshly ground coffee, the aroma of orange or lemon can be smelled during extraction. The nose is characterized by strong floral, fruity, sour and sweet aromas, but the alcohol is slightly thicker or less dense. The biggest disadvantage is that it is easy to bake unevenly, especially sun-dried beans. Even the best Grade3 Harald sun beans are often

Ethiopian coffee has the highest citrus aroma in the world. Whether instant coffee or freshly ground coffee, the aroma of orange or lemon can be smelled during extraction. The nose is characterized by strong floral, fruity, sour and sweet aromas, but the alcohol is slightly thicker or less dense. The biggest disadvantage is that it is easy to bake unevenly, especially sun-dried beans. Even the best Grade3 Harald sun-dried beans often show uneven color, which is the biggest defect of Ethiopian beans, but the good thing is that it does not affect its good flavor. For coffee fans, you don't have to worry about what the beans look like, it's the most important thing. The stability of Ethiopian water-washed beans is much better than that of sun-dried beans, whose flavor fluctuates greatly every year, so be sure to test it several times before buying in large quantities. If you buy good sun-dried beans, their flavor is much deeper than water-washed beans, but if you buy improperly handled sun-dried beans, it will certainly make people speechless. This is the feeling of many coffee fans how many Arabica species there are in Ethiopia. Even the official research unit of Ethiopia does not know. The coffee cooperatives in this mountain are certainly different from those planted in another mountain, and even small farmers in the same region grow different varieties of coffee. It has been estimated that there are at least 2000 varieties of Ethiopian coffee and even more than 4500 kinds of coffee. Compared with the fat posture of Bourbon 'SL28', the main variety to the south of Kenya, or Tibica in Central and South America and Asia, Ethiopian beans look a little malnourished. But the appearance of Ethiopian beans is easy to recognize. Most of the beans are small and tapering long beans, the so-called 'longberry', and often mixed with small oval short beans, the so-called' shortberry', looks uneven in size and uneven in appearance. The commercial bulk beans of Grade4 or Grade5 are mostly mixed with hundreds of different seeds in different regions, so the uneven appearance of beans is the most obvious, and it is not easy to bake even Ethiopian coffee beans into five grades. The first and second stages are washed beans. Washed beans Grade1 represents 3 defective beans per 300g raw beans, and Grade2 represents 4 defective beans per 300g. Gradc1 grade water washed beans are very rare and are generally difficult to buy. At present, all the washed beans exported from Ethiopia are Grade2 grade. The quality of sun-dried beans is in the order of Grade3, Grade4 or Grade5. Although the defective beans in Grade4 are much less than those in Grade5, coffee farmers claim that in order to save tax on exports, they often lower the quality of Grade4 to Grade5 in order to save money. This may just be a marketing tactic. In fact, the quality of Grade5 is not as good as that of Gradc4.

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