Coffee review

Half-sun red bourbon boutique coffee bean flavor and flavor characteristics of El Salvador Himalayan manor

Published: 2024-11-05 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2024/11/05, Flavor description: red wine sour plum brown sugar taste full lingering factory name: Dazhen coffee front street cafe location: Guangzhou Yuexiu district security front street 10 factory contact information: 020-38364473 ingredients table: home baking shelf life: 30 net content: 227g packaging: bulk coffee beans ripe degree of coffee beans origin: El Salvador coffee types: other El Salv

Flavor description: red wine, sour plum, brown sugar, full taste and long finish

Factory name: coffee front street cafe location: Guangzhou Yuexiu District Baoanqian Street 10 factory contact information: 38364473 ingredients table: home baking shelf life: 30 net content: 227g packaging: raw and ripe degree of bulk coffee beans origin: El Salvador coffee types: other

El Salvador Finca Himalaya

Country: El Salvador

Manor: Himalayan Manor

Production area: Santa Ana

Altitude: 1580Murray 1720m

Treatment: half-sun

Variety: red bourbon, Tiebika

Processing plant: El Divisadero

Flavor: plum, brown sugar, red wine acidity

Located in Santa Ana, a famous producing area in the Apaneca Mountains at an altitude of 1500 meters, Himalayan Manor is one of the few estates managed by Aida Batlle. The main varieties planted are bourbon.

The coffee beans from the estate are washed at Mauricio Salaverria's El Divisadero processing plant in Ataco, and then evenly dried in an African elevated shed bed with the help of sun and ventilation. Following the career of his parents and grandparents, Mauricio has been associated with coffee since childhood, especially focusing on the cultivation of boutique coffee.

About Project Origin

The winner of the Sasa Sestic,2015 World Barista Competition and his business team ONA Coffee started a raw bean shopping program called Project Origin three years ago. The project works directly with coffee growers in poor countries and regions to improve their production conditions and give them a purchase price 20% higher than the fair trade price.

The original intention of the project also includes strengthening the links between roasters and coffee farmers and guiding coffee farmers to grow high-quality coffee beans. So far, Sasa has established relationships with coffee growers from eight countries, including Brazil, Panama, India, Ethiopia, El Salvador and Costa Rica.

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