Introduction to the description of Variety characteristics and Flavor in the production process of Mexican Coffee with Sweet and sour characteristics
Mexican coffee-growing areas are mainly concentrated in the southeastern highlands, near Guatemala. Most of the mountains in the south are volcanic areas, and the volcanic ash soil is not only conducive to the drainage of coffee roots, but also provides sufficient nutrients for the growth of coffee trees. Most of the coffee varieties planted are Kaddura, Tibica, bourbon, etc., and the treatment methods are mostly water washing treatment, which are classified according to altitude.
Coffee beans are mainly exported to the United States, and about 70% of the coffee is exported directly to the United States, which is used as a large amount of industrial beans, making it a coffee plantation in the United States. However, Mexico's annual output is not proportional to its position in the coffee world. Although the output is large, there is a lack of some representative boutique coffee with outstanding quality. So when it comes to the level of understanding of Mexican coffee, most people, including myself, will feel relatively strange. When we taste and discuss beans from excellent producing areas of various countries, Mexican coffee exists awkwardly like an outsider.
But with a climate suitable for coffee growth, excellent coffee varieties, good soil and high-altitude planting areas, why is the quality of Mexican coffee not satisfactory?
A few days ago, when I went to Mexico, some colleagues jokingly called Mexico popcorn coffee. The quality of the raw beans exported by Mexico was not good, and the raw beans bought were sometimes mixed with a little corn and sand. If the corn is not picked clean and mixed with raw beans into the roaster, it will really become popcorn. But now the quality of raw beans exported from Mexico has been greatly improved, and the mixing of corn kernels has been a story for many years. Corn was cultivated by the ancient Indians of Mexico, so Mexico is known as the "hometown of corn", and corn is also the main crop in Mexico. Coffee in the drying process is not fine enough to mix with corn kernels. This explains why corn is mixed with corn. From this matter, it is not difficult to find that the root cause of the unsatisfactory overall quality of Mexican coffee lies in the follow-up production processing. From the harvest, processing, grading, packaging and transportation of coffee fruits, unreasonable operation will lead to the loss of good flavor for Mexican coffee, of course, the existence of high-quality coffee can not be ignored, many coffee gardens are also constantly improving their own planting, harvesting, and processing techniques. I drank this Mexican, ground dry aroma with refreshing herbal and nutty aromas. It has a medium mellow thickness, low acidity, sweet and sour red berries, smooth, clean and mild taste and a long finish. Generally speaking, Mexican coffee is worth a try. I also believe that the quality of Mexican coffee will become better and better with the improvement of local production technology, which is worth looking forward to.
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Flavor description of Costa Rican Yerzaro Coffee producing area introduction of planting Environment and Variety
Costa Rican coffee has full particles, ideal acidity and unique strong flavor. Costa Rica's coffee industry, originally controlled by the Costa Rican Coffee Industry Company (InstitutodelCafdeCostaRica, ICAFE), has been taken over by the official Coffee Committee (OficinadelCaf). In exported coffee, those products that are considered to be of substandard quality are used in blue.
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Smooth and smooth Dominica Coffee Flavor description Variety introduction to planting Environment in producing area
Coffee in Dominica varies slightly in taste according to the altitude of the region where it is grown, with sour but rich taste in the highlands, and less sour and smoother taste in the lowlands. On the other hand, the high-quality coffee beans produced by some Dominican estates have a rich aroma, mellow taste, moderately bright sour taste, and are often used with famous Puerto Rican or Jamaican coffee.
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