Coffee review

Flavor description of Honduran Coffee beans method of Grinding and Calibration in producing areas of varieties

Published: 2024-11-09 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2024/11/09, The flavor of Honduran coffee beans is described by regional grinding scale treatment. Brazil also has a "Rio" bean, exported by Rio de Janeiro, which is also famous, but it is named not because it tastes good, but because it tastes strange. It has a strong smell of iodine, which coffee experts particularly call "Rio".

Flavor description of Honduran Coffee beans method of Grinding and Calibration in producing areas of varieties

Brazil also has a "Rio" bean, exported by Rio de Janeiro, which is also famous, but it is named not because it tastes good, but because it tastes strange. It has a strong smell of iodine, which coffee experts particularly call "Rio"; another dishonorable word related to Rio beans is used to describe a somewhat irritating taste, called "Rioy," caused by coffee berries dried on trees that continue to ferment during drying and are often found in dried Rio beans. Although its output ranking is lower than that of Brazil, the coffee beans are of good quality, rich and unique aroma, sweet in acidity and moderate bitterness, which is very suitable for single drink or mixture. Colombian beans and Brazilian beans are the best choice of basic beans for blended coffee, but their flavor is more mellow and more fragrant than Brazilian beans. In addition to individual taste, they are also often used to blend coffee to increase the sweetness of coffee and to blend the bitterness of other coffee.

Central Colombia is divided into valleys by three north-south longitudinal mountains, of which the central and eastern mountains are the main coffee producing areas. The coffee here is named after a distributed market, with Medellin, Armenia and Manizales in the Central Mountains and Bogota and Bucaramanga in the eastern mountains.

The term "fine coffee" was first put forward by Ms. Knudsen of the United States in Coffee and Tea magazine. At that time, Ms. Knudsen, as a coffee buyer of B.C. Ireland in San Francisco, was very dissatisfied with the neglect of the quality of raw coffee in the industry, and even some big roasters mixed a large amount of Robesda beans in the comprehensive beans, so she put forward the concept of fine coffee to advocate the improvement of the quality of the industry. This term is used to describe coffee beans with distinctive flavor characteristics that grow in a special environment. Its use in international coffee conferences makes it spread rapidly.

In fact, according to Ms. Knudsen, people started drinking fine coffee, but later, due to the growing demand for coffee, the discovery and use of new coffee varieties led to the decline of coffee quality. later, people even began to dislike this bad coffee and began to turn to other drinks. In this case, Ms. Knudsen re-made people realize the value of boutique coffee, which led to a boutique coffee boom. In the United States, there are enterprises and stores in pursuit of boutique coffee represented by Starbucks. The market for boutique coffee is also growing. In the 1990s, with the rapid increase of boutique coffee retailers and cafes, boutique coffee has become one of the fastest growing markets in the catering service industry, reaching $12.5 billion in the United States alone in 2007. Now boutique coffee has become the fastest growing coffee market. Coffee producing and importing countries around the world are aware of the great potential of the boutique coffee market, and continue to make efforts in the production and production of boutique coffee.

0