Introduction to varieties of taste grinding scale for flavor description in Kenyan coffee producing area
Introduction to varieties of taste grinding scale for flavor description in Kenyan coffee producing area
Bourbon Bourbon was first brought to Kenya for planting. In the 1950s, the then agricultural research institution Scott Laboratory selected two excellent hybrids, SL-28 and SL-34, through unremitting efforts, subverting the long-standing prejudice of artificial breeding without excellent natural varieties. SL-28 and SL-34 help Kenyan coffee to form its own unique flavor characteristics and establish a perfect reputation in the coffee industry.
Like the choice of other coffee producing countries, although SL-28 and SL-34 have stood the test of time and cultivated generation after generation of faithful pumps for Kenyan coffee, the Kenyan government and the Coffee Research Institute (Coffee Research Foundation) have begun to promote a new variety, Ruiri 11, for the sake of coffee yield and disease resistance. The promoters assure coffee lovers that the new variety still has the classic flavor of Kenyan coffee. However, the continuous efforts have not won the recognition of coffee gluttons, who agree that the new varieties lack taste and that the future of Ruiru11 remains to be seen.
In addition to the prestigious traditional Arabica coffee, robusta coffee is also produced in the western lowlands of Kenya.
Coffee cultivation in Kenya
Mainly by large farms (Estate) and cooperatives (Cooperatives) two types. The former generally has a large planting area and has independent coffee processing facilities. Most coffee production is done by a large number of small farmers, who form coffee cooperatives. The Coffee Cooperative Society employs special managers to supervise the coffee processing of its members, even to the point of managing each coffee tree.
Compared with shading planting in many high-quality producing areas, Kenyan coffee is obviously more spicy and unrestrained, and shade trees are not common. In addition, Kenyan coffee rarely participates in certification, variety and environmental factors make the use of pesticides necessary, and organic certification, which is popular in other countries, becomes rare in Kenya.
Kenyan coffee harvest season
There are two harvest seasons in Kenya, the main harvest season is from October to December and the secondary harvest season is from May to July.
Kenyan coffee processing
Large farms usually have independent treatment facilities. A large number of small farmers usually pick ripe coffee fruits by hand. Coffee picking is a labor-intensive job that requires the whole family to deploy and even hire workers during the harvest season. The fresh fruit of the picked coffee needs to be delivered in time to the cooperative-owned coffee processing plant for pulping, which may be carried by ox carts, pick-up trucks or trucks. After peeling, Parchment coffee is briefly kept in the cooperative's processing plant and sent to a privately owned factory for shelling treatment.
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Flavor description of Yega Xuefei G1 washed Coffee beans introduction of varieties produced by grinding scale
Description of the flavor of Yega Xuefei G1 washed coffee beans varieties produced by grinding scale varieties Yega Xuefei itself is a small restaurant with a population of about 20, 000. The three nearby small producers, Wenago, Kochere and Gelena Abaya, are similarly classified into the regional category because the taste of their coffee is similar to that of Yega Xuefei. Yega snow caffeine, whether it's culture or
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