Coffee review

Grinding scale of El Salvador Pacamara Coffee beans introduction to the taste of regional treatment of varieties

Published: 2024-09-20 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2024/09/20, Introduction of coffee flavor and quality El Salvador is a producer of high-quality commercial Arabica beans and is famous for its strict and effective quality control. Since 2003, he has joined the COE competition. With excellent ancient coffee, it successfully entered the boutique coffee market.

Grinding scale of El Salvador Pacamara Coffee beans introduction to the taste of regional treatment of varieties

Flavor and quality of coffee

El Salvador is a producer of high-quality commercial Arabica beans and is famous for its strict and effective quality control.

Since 2003, he has joined the COE competition.

With excellent ancient coffee, successfully entered the boutique coffee market.

Coffee flavor is related to the microclimate of the producing area. On the whole, Salvadoran coffee inherits the mild quality of Central American coffee. It is soft, slightly sour and has beautiful sweetness, so it is suitable for blending.

Boutique Salvadoran coffee can also be impressive, including some pacamara varieties, which show active acidity, layered and deep taste, and a long finish.

Coffee organization

UCAFES:Organization of coffee producity cooperatives of el salvador, accounting for 25% of the total output

UCRAPROBEX:Organization of Land Reform Coffee Producing & Processing Cooperatives, including small farmers without land before the land reform, accounted for 10% of the total output.

ABECAFE:Association of millers and Coffee Exporters, including 99 processing plants and most exporters

The Association of Coffee Producers of El Salvador represents all coffee producers.

The above four coffee organizations, plus four national research institutes, constitute a coffee policy-making body--

The Salvadoran Coffee Association Consejo Salvadoreno del cafe (salvador coffee concil), which is involved in coffee promotion, data collection and international cooperation.

El Salvador boutique coffee is concentrated in the volcanic rock producing areas of Santa Ana in the west and Charantanan fruit in the northwest. In recent years, the top 10 cup tests are almost entirely from these two producing areas, with an elevation of about 9-1500 meters, mainly bourbon (68%). Followed by Pacas (29%), mixed-race Pakamara, Dulaai and Kaddura accounted for only 3% of El Salvador's coffee production. In its heyday, it was once the fourth largest coffee producer in the world, but decades of civil war almost dragged down the coffee industry. fortunately, the war has stopped in recent years, and the coffee industry has come back to life. The only benefit that the civil war brought to the Salvadoran country was that the farmers' fields were barren and failed to catch up with the most popular Katimo exposure train in the past two decades, thus preserving the ancient bourbon and Tibica varieties, that is to say, El Salvador still uses the most traditional shade planting. It has a positive effect on the aroma of coffee. In 2005, the Salvadoran mixed-race Pacamara boasted in coe, which confused many international cup testers and did not know how to score it. It was never expected that this hybrid bean not only broke the mellow boundary of coffee, but also expanded the visibility of Salvadoran coffee.

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