Coffee review

Description of Flavor and Flavor of Coffee in Fenghuang Manor, Costa Rica

Published: 2024-11-05 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2024/11/05, Costa Rica's coffee industry, originally controlled by the Costa Rican Coffee Industry Company (InstitutodelCafdeCostaRica, ICAFE), has been taken over by the official Coffee Committee (OficinadelCaf). Costa Rica has one of the highest levels of economic development in Central America, with a per capita GDP exceeding US $4600. I am rich in natural resources and bauxite.

Costa Rica's coffee industry, originally controlled by the Costa Rican Coffee Industry Company (ICAFE), has been taken over by the official Coffee Committee (Oficinale Cafe).

Costa Rica has one of the highest levels of economic development in Central America, with a per capita GDP exceeding US $4600. Colombia is rich in natural resources, with bauxite reserves of about 150 million tons, iron reserves of about 400 million tons, coal reserves of about 50 million tons and forest cover area of 600000 hectares. Its industry is mainly light industry and manufacturing industry, mainly textile, equipment, food, wood, chemical industry and so on. Agriculture focuses on the production of traditional products such as coffee, bananas and sugar cane. Costa Rica is the second largest banana exporter in the world after Ecuador. Coffee is the second most important product in Colombia's agriculture. Costa Rica's tourism industry is very developed, and tourism income is one of the main sources of Costa Rica's foreign exchange income. Since the 1990s, tourism has become the most dynamic industry in Colombia. Tourist attractions include Yilasu, Mount Boaz and Spanish colonial cultural sites. Although Costa Rica is still an agricultural country, it has achieved a relatively high standard of living, a general expansion of land ownership and a boom in tourism. Costa Rica's economy, which consists mainly of tourism, agriculture and exports of electronic components, has grown rapidly since the recession in 1997. Costa Rica is located in the strip of Central America and in the center of the Americas. It has direct access to Eurasia and has easy access to the American market.

Among the exported coffee, those products that are considered to be of substandard quality are colored with blue vegetable dyes and then transferred back to China for sale. Coffee consumed domestically (dyed blue or undyed) accounts for about 10% of total production, and local per capita coffee consumption is twice that of Italy or the United States.

Brazilian coffee fruit, a coffee producer, accounts for 1/3 of the world's coffee consumption and occupies a place in the global coffee market, although Costa Rica faces several times more natural disasters than other regions. but its acreage is enough to make up for it.

There are many kinds of coffee here, but its industrial policy is large and cheap, so there is not much premium coffee, but it is a good choice for mixing other coffees.

One of the most famous is Mountain Costa Rica Coffee, which tastes mellow and neutral. It can be boiled directly or mixed with other kinds of coffee beans into mixed coffee. It is also a good choice.

Other kinds of Brazilian coffee, such as Rio and Parana, can be produced in large quantities because they do not require too much care. Although the taste is rough, it is a kind of high-quality and inexpensive coffee, which has its own standards because it is distributed all over the country and varies in quality (NO.2~NO.8 according to the number of sundries, NO.13~NO.19 according to the size of beans, and six grades according to taste). Almost all Arabica varieties are of good quality and stable in price. The most famous one is Costa Rica, which has been a necessity of blended coffee and is familiar to the public since ancient times.

Excellent Costa Rican coffee is called "extra hard beans". This kind of coffee can grow above 1500 meters above sea level. Altitude has always been a problem for coffee growers. The higher the altitude, the better the coffee beans, not only because the higher altitude can increase the acidity of the coffee beans and thus increase the flavor, but also because the night temperature at the higher altitude is lower, which can make the trees grow slowly, thus the flavor of the coffee beans is stronger. In addition, due to the high altitude drop caused by sufficient rainfall, it is very beneficial to the growth of coffee trees. However, its negative effect is to increase additional transportation costs, which is likely to make coffee production unprofitable. The coffee industry in Costa Rica has adopted new technologies to increase efficiency, including using "electric eyes" to select beans and identify coffee beans of irregular size.

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