Coffee review

Columbia Hope Manor Rosa Coffee Flavor description characteristics Grinding scale quality taste introduction

Published: 2024-11-03 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2024/11/03, Colombian coffee rose summer coffee seeds were taken from Geisha Mountain (Mount Rosa) in southwestern Ethiopia in 1931, transplanted to Kenya in 1931 and 1932, replanted in Tanzania in 1936 and introduced to Costa Rica in 1953. It is not known when it will be introduced to Jaramillo Manor in Panama, except for the Jade Farm of Panama (Hacienda).

Colombian Coffee

Rose coffee seeds were taken from Geisha Mountain (Mount Rosa) in southwestern Ethiopia in 1931, transplanted to Kenya in 1931 and 1932, replanted in Tanzania in 1936 and introduced to Costa Rica in 1953. It is unknown when they were introduced to Jaramillo Manor in Panama, except that the Price Peterson family of Hacienda La Esmeralda in Panama bought the Galamie Manor in 1996. Found that the edge of the manor has a unique flavor of coffee, so participated in the 2004 Panama "extraordinary Cup" (COE) competition, did not want to become famous, and has won awards almost every year since. Later, it was identified that the variety originated from Ethiopia's "Rose Summer Mountain", so it was called "Rose Summer" coffee. Panamanian Rosa coffee once fetched a sky-high price of nearly $290 per kilogram

The main varieties of Colombian coffee are small grains of coffee. Plants are small trees or large shrubs, 5-8 m tall, usually much branched at base; old branches gray-white, nodes dilated, young branches glabrous, compressed. Leaves thinly leathery, ovate-lanceolate or lanceolate, 6-14 cm long and 3.5-5 cm wide, apex long acuminate, acuminate part 10-15 mm long, base cuneate or slightly obtuse, rarely rounded, entire or shallowly wavy, both surfaces glabrous, lower vein axils with or without small pores; midrib raised on both surfaces of leaf, 7-13 on each side of lateral veins; petiole 8-15 mm long Stipules broadly triangular, arising from the tip of the upper part of the young branch conical or awn tip, the tip of the old branch is often protruding tip, 3-6 mm long. Cymes several clustered in leaf axils, each with 2-5 flowers, without a total pedicel or with a very short peduncle; flowers fragrant, with pedicels 0.5-1 mm long; bracts base ±connate, dimorphic, 2 broadly triangular, nearly equal in length and width, the other 2 lanceolate, 2 times as long as wide, leaf-shaped; calyx tubular, 2.5-3 mm long, calyx eaves truncate or 5-denticulate. Corolla white, length varies from breed to breed, generally 10-18 mm long, apically often 5-lobed, rarely 4-or 6-lobed, lobes often longer than Corolla tube, tip often obtuse; anthers protruding from Corolla tube, 6-8 mm long; style 12-14 mm long, stigma 2-lobed, 3-4 mm long. Berries broadly elliptic, red, 12-16 mm long, 10-12 mm in diameter, exocarp dura, mesocarp fleshy, sweet at maturity; seeds raised abaxially, ventral flat, longitudinally grooved, 8-10 mm long and 5-7 mm in diam. The suitable climate in Colombia from March to April provides a real "natural pasture" for coffee.

Hope Manor has four estates (Esperanza, Las Margaritas, Cerro Azul and Potosi). Its manor won the Best of Panama Best Panama Champion (2008) and runner-up (2009) *. 2012 even arranged three seats in the top ten of SCAA Coffee of the Year with three products, the incredible number 2, 3 and 7. , GFA (Good Food Award), Hope Manor has also become the only award-winning estate outside Ethiopia, Kenya and Panama.

Hope that the manor is different from other manors, with doctoral botanists, three professional cup surveyors, 100 full-time employees, and currently manages a manor under its jurisdiction. The estate is owned by the Herrera brothers. In fact, the grandfather of the Herrera brothers, who ran a coffee farm in the Trujillo district of Colombia, gradually declined, and the two brothers left Colombia. But they didn't give up their dream of running a coffee farm in their hometown.

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