Coffee review

Introduction to the flavor and taste characteristics of Bolivian coffee manor

Published: 2024-11-08 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2024/11/08, Because there are so many kinds of Brazilian coffee in Brazil, you can't just use the word Brazilian coffee to include it. Like other Arabica coffee, Brazilian coffee is called Brazils to distinguish it from Milds coffee. The vast majority of Brazilian coffee is unwashed and sun-dried and is classified according to the name of the state of origin and port of transport. Brazil has 21 states and 17 states produce coffee, but its

As there are so many kinds of Brazilian coffee in Brazil, you can't just use the word "Brazilian coffee" to include it. Like other Arabica coffee, Brazilian coffee is called "Brazils" to distinguish it from "Milds" coffee. The vast majority of Brazilian coffee is unwashed and sun-dried and is classified according to the name of the state of origin and port of transport. Brazil has 21 states and 17 states produce coffee, but four of them produce the largest, accounting for 98 per cent of national production: Parana, Sao Paulo, Minas Gerais and Espirito Santo, with the southern state producing the most, accounting for 50 per cent of total production.

Although coffee is diverse, Brazilian coffee is suitable for the taste of the public. For example, coffee produced in the northern coastal areas has a typical iodine taste, reminiscent of the sea after drinking. This coffee is exported to North America, the Middle East and Eastern Europe.

Another kind of coffee that is interesting and worth looking for is washed Bahia coffee. This kind of coffee is not easy to find because Brazil is the world's largest consumer of coffee after the United States, and many of the best coffee can only be found in its domestic market.

In Brazil, the largest producer is Robbins. This kind of coffee is sold in the supermarket. Brazil's Robucht coffee, sold under the name Conillon, accounts for 15 per cent of total production.

Old bourbon coffee is grown on some estates in the Serrado district of Minas Greais state in southeastern Brazil. Old varieties of bourbon coffee grown on these estates, such as Capin Branco and Vista Allegre, are also sold on the market. Although they come from the same area, these coffees have their own characteristics. Cappinblanco coffee is smoother than Vesta Allegre coffee, while Vesta Allegre coffee is strong and black, both of which have lower acidity. However, like all Brazilian coffee, they are most suitable for drinking when they are fresh and tender, because the older they are, the more acidic they are. These coffee growers have organized themselves into the Brazilian Special Coffee Association (the Speciality Coffee Association of Brazil), just as Colombia is named in honor of Columbus, the discoverer of the New World, Brazil is named because Brazil is rich in trees called Brazilian wood, and Bolivia commemorates Simon Bolivar, the hero who made an important contribution to the liberation of Latin America.

This is a strange country, the legal capital is Sucre, and the seat of government is La Paz. While Sucre has only the Supreme Court, La Paz is the seat of the government and parliament.

Bolivia is a landlocked country, about 1/3 of the territory is the Andes, rugged terrain, high altitude. La Paz is known as the capital with the highest elevation in the world. Although there is no beautiful tropical seaside scenery, the lake scenery and the unique scenery of the Andes are also extremely nostalgic, and the Uyuni Salt Lake, known as the Mirror of the Sky, is a wonder of the world. Without a developed economy, this is one of the poorest countries in South America. But the people here are quite optimistic and open, and it is true that different people have different pleasures of life.

Coffee mellow Tour (25) Bolivian Coffee

(mirror of the sky, Uyuni Salt Lake)

Coffee mellow Tour (25) Bolivian Coffee

(Bolivian carnival in full dress)

Coffee in Bolivia really began to be commercially produced in the 1950s (at first coffee trees were just planted around the house as a fence), but the coffee industry developed rapidly in a very short time. This is partly due to the impact of the Brazilian frost in 1975, when Brazil's coffee industry was hit hard, and Bolivia's coffee industry took advantage of the opportunity to develop rapidly.

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