Coffee review

An introduction to the characteristics of coffee flavor and taste of Yega Fischer Manor in Ethiopia with soft floral fragrance

Published: 2024-11-05 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2024/11/05, Ethiopia has two of the best producing areas, Yiragcheffe and Sidamo. Sidamo is located in a plateau region south of Ethiopia. Sidamo has a balanced acidity and moderate consistency. In Ethiopia, people usually have a cup of mocha coffee for breakfast to replenish the spirit and vitality of the day. As Ethiopia's classification system is still very backward,

Ethiopia has two of the best producing areas, Yiragcheffe and Sidamo. Sidamo is located in a plateau region south of Ethiopia. Sidamo has a balanced acidity and moderate consistency. In Ethiopia, people usually have a cup of mocha coffee for breakfast to replenish the spirit and vitality of the day.

As Ethiopia's classification system is still very backward, it can be divided into special grades (usually Yirgacheffe and Sidamo), level 1, level 2, level 3, level 4 and level 5.

In Ethiopia, Japanese beans are usually found, such as small stones or twigs, so special attention should be paid to grinding.

Of course, there are these small shortcomings, but they do not affect his taste, and what is most worth mentioning is that sidamo's mocha caffeine is a natural decaf coffee. Try Japanese-style coffee and feel the wild and unrestrained desert love. Ethiopia's Yirgacheffe coffee is petite, but it is gentle and delicate, sweet and lovely. As the hometown of coffee, thousands of years of planting history and processing tradition in Ethiopia have created high-quality washed Arabica beans. Light baking has unique sweet aromas of lemon, flowers and honey, soft acidity and citrus flavors, fresh and bright on the palate. No milk or sugar, let the rich texture and unique soft flower scent brush your taste buds, leaving an endless aftertaste.

Yega Xuefei is a small town, 700-2100 meters above sea level, synonymous with Ethiopian boutique coffee. It has been a wetland since ancient times. The ancient saying "Yirga" means "settle down" and "Cheffe" means "wetland". The mode of production and flavor of coffee here is so outstanding that Ethiopian coffee farmers compete to be proud of the flavor of their coffee, making it the most famous coffee producing area in Africa.

At first, Yejassefi's coffee trees were planted by European monks, and later by farmers or cooperatives. Yejasuefei is actually constructed by the surrounding coffee communities or cooperatives, including: Hafusha, Hama, Biloya Garshefi is a small town, 1200 meters above sea level, is also synonymous with Ethiopian boutique beans. It has been a wetland since ancient times, and the ancient saying "Yejia" means "settle down", and "Xuefei" means "wetland", so "Yejiaxuefei" means "let us settle down in this wetland".

Strictly speaking, Yega Xuefei is a by-product area of Sidamo. Located in the northwest of Sidamo, with mountains and lakes, the town is one of the highest coffee-producing areas in Egypt. However, the mode of production and flavor here are so outstanding that Egyptian coffee farmers compete to be proud of the flavor of their coffee, so they are independent from Sidamo and become the most famous producing area in Africa.

At first, Yejasuefei's coffee trees were planted by European monks (somewhat similar to Belgian monks who advocated planting wheat and brewing beer), and later by farmers or cooperatives. Yega Xuefei is actually built by surrounding coffee communities or cooperatives, including Edido, Hafusha, Hama and Bdon near the Fog Valley.

Most coffee beans are washed with water, but a few peas are deliberately sunburned to enhance their charming fruit aroma and mellow thickness. These mountain villages are foggy, like spring all year round, with a gentle breeze in summer, cool but not hot, rain but not damp, and no cold damage in winter, giving birth to a unique "regional flavor" of citrus and flower fragrance. Caffeine F trees are mostly planted in farmers' own backyards or mixed with other crops in farmland, and the yield per household is not much, which is a typical pastoral coffee. Almost all of the award-winning beans come from the above-mentioned coffee villages and communities.

The so-called "Yega Chuefei" refers to strong aromas of jasmine, lemon or green citric acid, as well as sweet peaches, almonds and tea. The author's tasting experience has only one sentence: "Coffee entrance, flowers in full bloom!" Except for the comfort of the taste buds and olfactory cells in the nasal cavity touched by flowers. In addition to the fragrance of flowers, the delicate mellow thickness is like silk and feels wonderful to the touch. At present, many coffee chemists begin to study the microclimate and soil and water around Yega Xuefei, in order to sum up the planting equation of fine coffee.

0