Coffee review

Nicaragua los congo estate coffee grind processing taste varieties production characteristics introduction

Published: 2024-09-20 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2024/09/20, The development of coffee industry in Nicaragua is not easy. Due to the influence of civil war, coffee production has dropped sharply for a time, but it has shown an upward trend in recent years. Although coffee farmers are already living in poverty, and the poor economic base makes the coffee industry in a relatively backward state, coffee produced in Madagalpa, Chinodega and Segovia is still popular in the world.

The development of the coffee industry in Nicaragua is really not easy. Due to the influence of the civil war, coffee production decreased sharply for a time, but only showed an upward trend in recent years. Although coffee farmers are already living in poverty and the poor economic foundation makes the coffee industry relatively backward, the coffee produced in Madaguelba, Sinodega and Segovia is still highly respected by coffee lovers around the world (in particular, one of the coffee produced in Madagelba is said to be very similar to Kenya's AA). No matter where you come from, good coffee will always be appreciated.

Beautiful sour taste, moderate mellow

Nicaraguan coffee belongs to Central and South American style coffee, although the acidity is not very high, but it feels refreshing. The mellow degree is also not high, but the overall feeling is just right, neither thin nor too strong. To make it easier to accept. The taste of red wine can be vaguely felt in the shallow sour taste, which is also a major feature of Nicaraguan coffee. It's not as obvious as Kenyan coffee, but what's wrong with a gentle and gentle feeling?

The planting conditions in Nicaragua are not inferior to those in Central American countries. Coffee with shade at high altitude is grown in a round and balanced taste with less sharp acid. The main unknown factor is war and hurricanes, resulting in the unsustainable operation of a single farm. There is no historical data for raw bean merchants to track and consult farm data, until after 2003, the bad factors leading to coffee quality are removed, and backward traffic is also fully built. Good coffee continues to emerge. As a laggard, they have made quite a sensation.

Nouak coffee is not easy to come by and is called "the rarest coffee in the remaining variety". Specifically, this kind of coffee comes from the Indonesian island of Sumatra, where coffee trees grow for a long time. When the coffee berries are ripe, local farmers deliberately put cats into coffee plantations and let them indulge. Not all cats are blessed to enjoy a coffee feast, and local farmers believe that only a kind of palm cat unique to Indonesia is qualified for the job. When the palm cats are full, the local farmers bow down and cover their noses in search of cat droppings. Once they found the target, they knelt down and dug like archaeologists, and if they were lucky, they could find a few whole coffee beans that had not been digested by the cat. Palm cats can digest most coffee beans, and those "surviving" coffee beans have thicker, harder shells that are not easy to digest, just what farmers want. After the collection work is completed, the farmers wash these special coffee beans thoroughly. After several processes such as deodorization and processing, these coffee beans will serve people's taste buds.

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