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Some
people swear by Guatemalan coffee. Others only like
Sumatran. Still others go out of their way to find African
coffees. In these cases, it’s not the roast of the
coffee that people are looking for, but where it was
grown. And most of the time, they’re searching for more
than just a name.
Coffee
beans taste different depending upon where they are grown.
Soil, climate, altitude, species variety, harvesting and
processing methods all are factors that affect the flavor
of the coffee.
Even
if you buy the same coffee every time, it may taste
different. Flavor changes with each roast, and taste and
quality of the green coffee beans vary with each harvest
season and shipment. Each year, the coffee can have a
subtly different flavor, or be of a different quality due
to changes in some of the above variables. For this
reason, we do cupping tests of our coffee before
purchasing it, even when we’ve bought from the same
region before, to ensure that the coffee meets our
established quality standards for each region.
There
are certain conditions that are ideal for growing Arabica
beans: rich, volcanic soil, the cover of shade trees, high
elevations, temperatures between 60 and 70 degrees, and 75
inches of annual rainfall. In a very broad sense, coffees
grown near each other have similar characteristics. Certain
regions have reputations for consistently producing the
highest quality beans, although this varies from year to
year depending on variations in climate and changes in
harvesting and processing methods.
There
are three principal growing regions of coffee: Africa,
Asia/Pacific, and the Americas. The Asia/Pacific region
includes Indonesia, Micronesia, Southeast Asia and the
surrounding smaller island countries.
One
of the main reasons coffee production thrives in these
lands is due to the geology of these areas. Both the
Asia/Pacific region and the Americas are located on the
"Ring of Fire." The Ring of Fire refers to the
border of the Pacific Ocean, where many earthquakes and
volcanoes occur, and mountain ranges run parallel with the
coast of the surrounding continents. Some of the best
quality coffees in the world are grown here because of the
high altitudes and rich volcanic soil.
Africa
also is experiencing geological changes which make it
ideal for coffee growing. While the Pacific coast is
undergoing compressional stress as plates are pushed
together, Africa is rifting apart and experiencing
tensional stress. The East African Rift Valley is the
evidence for this change. Volcanic soil is also present,
as are mountains, making Africa another good place for
coffee.
At
Peace Coffee, we offer single origin coffees from each of
these well-known coffee producing regions: Ethiopia, Guatemala, Mexico, Sumatra and Colombia.
Coffee
from the Americas tends to be the lightest and brightest.
These coffees are described as crisp and clean, with good
acidity, in other words, a bright aftertaste.
Ethiopian
coffee is marked by many excellent regional varieties within the
country’s growing area. Peace
Coffee offers Ethiopian Yirgacheffe, which is characterized
by mild, fruity, and floral overtones. African coffees
also have good levels of acidity, and produce a lingering
aftertaste.
Coffees
hailing from the Asia/Pacific region in general are full
of body. They often exhibit more of an "earthy wild
mushroom" taste than coffees from other regions.
Sumatran coffees, such as our Gayo Mountain, are some of
the heaviest, smoothest, and most complex coffees in the
world.
These
regional differences are highlighted or downplayed
depending on the style of roast but a coffee’s unique
flavor still begins with it’s origin on a faraway
mountain under the tropical canopy of a rainforest.
For
more information on coffee varieties, visit the following
sites:
http://www.coffeereview.com
http://www.espresso101.com/news
http://www.coffeeresearch.org
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