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Colombia Huilan Coffee Bean Characteristics Taste Flavor Description Processing Method Grinding Scale Introduction

Published: 2025-08-21 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2025/08/21, Colombia is the world's largest producer of washed Arabica coffee, which can be picked all year round, so you can drink fresh coffee at any time. That's one of the charms of Colombia. Huilan County is a major coffee producing area in southern Colombia, rich in natural resources and producing coffee.

A brief introduction to the grinding scale of Columbia Huilan coffee bean by describing the characteristics of taste and flavor

Colombia is the world's largest producer of washable Arabica coffee, which can be picked all the year round, so you can drink fresh coffee at any time. This is one of the charms of Colombia. Huilan County is a major coffee producing area in southern Colombia, which is rich in natural resources, and the coffee produced is rich in sour and sweet taste. However, the diversity of Colombian coffee can be felt according to the growing environment and cultivation methods in different regions.

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 apical cone-shaped tip or awn tip of upper part of young shoots

Huilan area belongs to the mountain terrain, and coffee is grown on the slopes of the canyon, so it has a high altitude and suitable temperature for growing high-quality Arabica beans. The climate of the canyon slope not only prevents the cold wind from blowing in, the mountain breeze sends cool without high temperature, but Rain Water is also relatively abundant. It can be said that the Colombian coffee workers are all hand-picked coffee beans (also known as coffee cherries) on the mountain, so they can be carefully selected to pick the most mature and full fruits. And the vast majority of coffee beans are water-washed, moderately roasted with a light, silky and sometimes sour taste, not as strong as Brazilian coffee and Italian Espresso.

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