COFFEE
Coffee was first discovered in Eastern Africa in an area we know today
as Ethiopia. A popular legend refers to a goat herder by the name of Kaldi, who
observed his goats acting unusually friskily after eating berries from a bush.
Curious about this phenomenon, Kaldi tried eating the berries himself. He found
that these berries gave him renewed energy.
Although wild plants can reach 10 - 12 metres in height, the plantation
one reaches a height of around four metres. This makes the harvest and
flowering easier, and cultivation more economical. The flowers are white and
sweet-scented like the Spanish jasmine. Flowers give way to a red, darkish
berry. At first sight, the fruit is like a big cherry both in size and in
colour. The berry is coated with a thin, red film (epicarp) containing a white,
sugary mucilaginous flesh (mesocarp). Inside the pulp there are the seeds in
the form of two beans coupled at their flat surface. Beans are in turn coated
with a kind of resistant, golden yellow parchment, (called endocarp). When
peeled, the real bean appears with another very thin silvery film. The bean is
bluish green verging on bronze, and is at the most 11 millimetres long and 8
millimetres wide.
Coffee plants need special conditions to give a satisfactory crop. The
climate needs to be hot-wet or hot temperate, between the Tropic of Cancer and
the Tropic of Capricorn, with frequent rains and temperatures varying from 15
to 25 Degrees C. The soil should be deep, hard, permeable, well irrigated, with
well-drained subsoil. The best lands are the hilly ones or from just-tilled
woods. The perfect altitude is between 600 and 1200 metres, though some
varieties thrive at 2000-2200 metres. Cultivation aimed at protecting the
plants at every stage of growth is needed. Sowing should be in sheltered
nurseries from which, after about six months, the seedlings should be moved to
plantations in the rainy season where they are usually alternated with other
plants to shield them from wind and excessive sunlight. Only when the plant is five
years old can it be counted upon to give a regular yield. This is between 400
grams and two kilos of arabica beans for each plant, and 600 grams and two
kilos for robusta beans.
Harvesting time depends on the geographic situation and it can vary greatly
therefore according to the various producing countries. First the ripe beans
are picked from the branches. Pickers can selectively pick approximately 250 to
300 pounds of coffee cherry a day. At the end of the day, the pickers bring
their heavy burlap bags to pulping mills where the cherry coffee can be pulped
(or wet milled). The pulped beans then rest, covered in pure rainwater to
ferment overnight. The next day the wet beans are hand-distributed upon the
drying floor to be sun dried. This drying process takes from one to two weeks
depending on the amount of sunny days available. To make sure they dry evenly,
the beans need to be raked many times during this drying time. Two weeks later
the sun dried beans, now called parchment, are scooped up, bagged and taken to
be milled. Huge milling machines then remove the parchment and silver skin,
which renders a green bean suitable for roasting. The green beans are roasted
according to the customers’ specifications and, after cooling, the beans are
then packaged and mailed to customers.
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