Hawaiian coffee beans Hawaiian Kona coffee
Kona coffee is grown on the slopes of Mauna Roa volcano on the southwest coast of Hawaii. In terms of flavor, Kona beans are closer to Central American coffee than Indonesian coffee. Its average quality is very high, carefully handled, medium texture, good sour taste, very rich flavor, and fresh Kona coffee is extremely fragrant. If you think your coffee is too thick, African coffee is too sour, Central and South American coffee is too rough, then "Kona" may be suitable for you. Kona is like a girl in the Hawaiian sunshine breeze, fresh and natural.
Kona coffee beans are average and neat in shape, with strong sour and sweet taste, moist and smooth taste. Because they grow on volcanoes and have high-density artificial farming, each bean can be said to be a spoiled "lady" with beautiful, plump and baby-like skin.
Although Hawaii is often affected by tornadoes, the climatic conditions are very suitable for the coffee industry. There is plenty of rain and sunshine, and there is no worry of frost. In addition, there is a strange natural phenomenon called "free shade". On most days, around 2 o'clock in the afternoon, white clouds appear in the sky, providing the necessary shade for the coffee trees. In fact, it is such superior natural conditions that make Arabica coffee in the Kona region produce more coffee than any other plantation in the world, and always maintain high quality, unique growth and climate environment to create a stronger coffee flavor.
But to the regret of coffee fans, only about 1400 hectares of coffee is produced. And because of Hawaii's high income and a large number of tourists, Kona coffee is so expensive that it is even sold as "kona blend" (no more than 5 per cent of Kona beans). Neighboring islands such as maui, kauai and molokai have also begun to grow coffee commercially.
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Rwanda Coffee Flavor
Malaba Coffee (Rwandan: Ikawa ya Maraba, French: Caf de Maraba) is Fairtrade certified coffee grown in the Malaba area of southern Rwanda. Malaba's coffee crop is a bourbon of the Arabica species and is grown in fertile volcanic soil on high-altitude hills. The fruits of coffee trees are mainly picked manually during the rainy season from March to May.
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Sumatra Lindong coffee beans
The beans in the GAYO Mountains are now the best in Sumatra, mostly grown in old trees, at high elevations, between 1500 and 2500. This producing area is located in ACEH, the place where the great tsunami occurred. I hope the export of coffee can help the people there after the tsunami. For coffee from GAYO producing areas, the Indonesian and international standard titles are Gayo Arabi.
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