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Sweet Maria's Coffee Colombian Huila - Palestina Micro-region
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Colombian Huila - Palestina Micro-region
Sweet Maria's Coffee

Some introductory comments are needed (skip this part of you read the full Oporapa review): a long time ago some chump decided that better coffee came from larger coffee beans. Colombia was in the audience that night, took it all in, and developed a system of pooling all coffees together in lots based on bean size. Thus we came up with Supremo and Excelso in the better grades of Colombian (there are also UGQ and FAQ which are seductive acronyms for Usual Good Quality and Fair Average Quality, but those don't concern us here). Being a coffee behemoth and slow to change, Colombia has been reticent to change the system that they impose on farmers, exporters, and roasters until recently, although it makes no sense. Bigger coffee seeds from bigger coffee cherries don't mean better flavor, as much as a bigger cup of coffee tastes better (the 7-Eleven logic?) What does make coffee quality improve? Besides good standards of farming and preparation, it is the unique region, the soil, the altitude, the weather, and the care the farm puts into the plant. So as a new direction, one that makes sense for Colombia, we have these new micro-regional lots. (Estate coffees rarely make sense in Colombia because each farm is too small to produce a lot that can be milled distinct, and shipped separately). So we could call these "micro-pooled" lots. Using cupping techniques (mostly with a mobile cupping lab) small regions are identified that have special cup character. It might be centered around a town, it might be one particular hill or valley. Size is ignored to a greater degree, but the coffee is carefully prepared to remove defective seeds. Palestina is centered around the town of the same name (not sure of the history of this unique name, biblical or cultural?) This cup has a dynamic, sparkling brightness in the aromatics and the cup flavors. It has lighter body, and perhaps a lower overall intensity than the Oporapa lot, but also more lively on the bright end. This is more typical of a really good Huila. There's an fruit in the cup that falls between peach and mango, and lingers through in the finish.


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For more information on this product, visit Sweet Maria's Coffee's website.

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Manufacturer: Sweet Maria's Coffee
Location: 1115 21st Street
  Oakland, CA 94607 USA
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Website: Click to visit



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