Coffee review

Introduction of Coffee Flavor and Taste characteristics in Incht Manor, Guatemala

Published: 2025-08-21 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2025/08/21, A green gechar bird perches on the scroll. This is the national bird of Guatemala, also known as the Bird of Freedom, which is regarded as a symbol of freedom, patriotism and friendship. Behind the scroll are rifles and swords, symbolizing that the people of the country are always ready to defend the freedom of the motherland. The above pattern is surrounded by laurel branches. Head of State: president Oscar Hossera Felleher Perdomo, January 1, 2004

A green "Gechal" bird perches on the scroll. This is Guatemala's national bird, also known as the "Bird of Freedom", which is regarded as a symbol of freedom, patriotism and friendship. Behind the scroll are rifles and swords, symbolizing that the people of the country are always ready to defend the freedom of the motherland. The above pattern is surrounded by laurel branches.

Head of State: president Oscar Jose Rafael Berhe Perdomo, who took office on 14 January 2004.

Physical geography: more than 108000 square kilometers. Located in the north of Central America. Bordering Mexico, Belize, Honduras and El Salvador. It is bordered by the Pacific Ocean to the south and the Gulf of Honduras in the Caribbean Sea to the east, bordering Mexico, El Salvador, Honduras and Belize on land. 2/3 of the territory consists of mountains and plateaus. There are Kuchu Matanes Mountains in the west, Madre Mountains in the south, volcanic belts in the west and south, with more than 30 volcanoes. Tahumurco volcano is 4211 meters above sea level, which is the highest peak in Central America. Earthquakes are frequent. There are Petten lowlands in the north. There are narrow coastal plains on the Pacific coast. The major cities are mostly distributed in the intermountain basins in the south. Located in the tropics, the northern and eastern coastal plains have a tropical rain forest climate, and the southern mountains have a subtropical climate. The year is divided into two dry and wet seasons, with wet seasons from May to October and dry seasons from November to April of the following year. The annual precipitation is 2000-3000 mm in the northeast and 500-1000 mm in the south. Forests account for half of the country's area, especially in the lowlands of Peteng, which are rich in valuable wood such as mahogany. Mineral deposits include lead, zinc, nickel, copper, gold, silver, oil and so on.

Population: 11.68 million (2005). It has the largest population and the highest proportion of indigenous peoples in Central America, with Indians accounting for 53 per cent, Indo-Europeans accounting for 45 per cent and whites accounting for 2 per cent. The official language is Spanish, as well as 23 native languages such as Maya. 75% of the residents are Catholic and 25% are Protestant.

The aroma of coffee liberates all forms, hearts and national boundaries. Through coffee, the mood leaves the country at any time and lands in a strange country half a world away. Even at the end of the world, you can share a mood. Antigua was the capital of the Spanish colonial period in 1543. Although this emerald-like valley has been surrounded by active volcanoes in all directions, layered, deliberately waiting and full of dangers since ancient times, its vastness, vastness and fertility still tempted Spaniards to build a capital in the precarious cliff valley.

The volcano once destroyed the once-prosperous capital in an instant, robbing it of all its prosperity and beauty overnight. After this subversive mountain city, the splendor has disappeared for more than 200 years, and Antigua has never swaggered again. After being dull, Antigua is now run by the last remaining Indians. These hardworking Indians became later coffee producers. They not only discovered the rich and attractive unique smell of Antigua coffee, but also brought it to people all over the world. Today, Antigua coffee enjoys a reputation as the best quality coffee in the world and is praised by coffee connoisseurs as the best and most distinctive coffee in the world.

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Mayan coffee culture

Some people say that you will see a wonderful story in the unique smoky taste of a cup of Antigua coffee in Guatemala. It is a story about Indians.

Drinking pure Antigua coffee from Guatemala and playing a South American folk song. Our thoughts can be pulled far away, as far as we have never met before. The wise Mayans who once existed in the land of Guatemala, after a day's work under a coffee tree we have never seen before, they enjoyed authentic Guatemalan coffee after dinner and watched the sunset fade over the sea level.

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