Coffee review

Fruit-flavored Burundian coffee beans taste manor characteristics of Burundian coffee

Published: 2024-09-20 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2024/09/20, The chaos of Burundian coffee has been going on for a long time, with a large number of old and new raw beans mixed together, making this coffee unsuitable for grading. This coffee is rough but mild, and has characteristics similar to Kenyan coffee. The flavor is sweet and fruity, with a slightly spicy finish. Dry aroma (1-5): not suitable for wet aroma (1-5): not suitable for acid

The chaos of Burundian coffee has been going on for a long time, with a large number of old and new raw beans mixed together, making this coffee unsuitable for grading. This coffee is rough but mild, and has characteristics similar to Kenyan coffee. The flavor is sweet and fruity, with a slightly spicy finish.

Dry aroma (1-5): not applicable

Wet aroma (1-5): not applicable

Acidity (brightness) (1-10): not applicable

Taste (layered) (1-10): not applicable

Taste (alcohol thickness) (1-5): not applicable

Aftertaste (residue) (1-10): not applicable

Balance (1-5): not applicable

Base score (50): not applicable

Total score (maximum 100): not applicable

Strength / main attributes: medium strong / sweet, fruit flavor, spicy aftertaste.

Recommended baking degree: full city

Contrast: very similar to Kenyan coffee, Burundi is a small landlocked country located at the junction of eastern and central Africa, across the Nile and Congo basins, with mainly hilly and mountainous landforms and excellent coffee-growing elevations. The history of coffee cultivation in Burundi is not long, its coffee planting industry is carried out entirely in the form of small family farms, there is a great difference in quality, and years of war and social unrest have made its coffee planting industry very chaotic. But I have to admit that it has the potential to produce high-quality coffee.

The Burundian Buyendi AA,FWS Londi Coffee bears a striking resemblance to its neighbour Rwanda, whose coffee is often confused. Burundian coffee is mainly grown in bourbon, with cherries processed by traditional wet treatment. The main characteristic of its fine coffee is its elegant sweetness and bright citrus aroma Arabica coffee tree. The cultivation of the Arabica coffee tree in Cameroon (Cameroon) began in 1913, its variety is the Blue Mountain Coffee of Jamaica, but the country also produces large quantities of Robbins Coffee. The quality and characteristics of Cameroon coffee is similar to that of coffee from South America. The best coffee in the country comes from Bamileke and Bamoun in the northwest. Here, it also grows some giant coffee beans and bean-shaped berry coffee.

Since the late 1980s, coffee production in Cameroon has declined, from 1.8 million bags in 1987 to 1.1 million bags in 1990, while Arabica coffee has dropped from 400000 bags to 200000 bags in the same period. Today, due to the strengthening of the management of the State Coffee Supervision Bureau (National Coffee Supervisory Agency), the output and quality of coffee may pick up.

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