Brazil
Coffee
Coming from the largest coffee producing country in the world, you know
that a cup of Brazil coffee is going to hit the spot. It comes in a
range from cheap mass produced coffee to the best espresso brewed
coffee bean. When producing Brazil coffee the fruit is removed from the
coffee bean. This is accomplished by four different methods and it is
not uncommon for all of the methods to be used the same farm. It is
also common for all four methods to be used during the same harvest of
the coffee as well.
These beans are grown at a lower altitude than other coffee beans of
the world that are grown in places with higher altitudes such as
Central America, Columbia, and East Africa. These other coffee
producing areas grow their coffee at around 5,000 feet in altitude
while Brazil coffee is grown at around 2000 feet. The growth of Brazil
coffee in lower altitudes brings about a low acidity of the coffee bean
as the beans of the Brazil variety are round, sweet, and well nuanced
while the others produced at higher altitudes have beans that are big
and bright.
Two of the more traditional coffees of Brazil are Santos Brazils and
Estate Brazils. These types of Brazil coffee are the types that you
will most likely find in a specialty coffee store. They have been dried
inside the fruit. Therefore the sweet nature of the fruit is
transferred to inside the cup of coffee. It usually is derived from the
coffee trees of the traditional variety of Arabica, which is called
bourbon. The finest types of Brazil coffee are traded as Santos 2.
If the coffee bean comes only from the bourbon coffee bean trees the
coffee is called Bourbon Santos 2. The name Santos is derived from the
port in which the coffee beans are generally shipped from. The 2 on the
name of Santos 2, or any type of coffee, is the grade as 2 is the
highest grade of Brazil coffee. The 2 is usually not present when the
coffee is presented on menus of specialty coffee stores so the beverage
will only be shown as Brazil Bourbon Santos or Brazil Santos.
In order to make the coffee bean light, beans grown in Brazil are
wet-processed. Sometimes the coffee is dried without the skins on them
but the pulp from the fruit that is still stuck on the beans absorbs
the sweetness from the pulp. This makes the Brazil coffee full and
sweet much like if the beans were to be drying processed. Dry
processing is the process this premium coffee undergoes when being
shipped to the United States. Dry processed coffee is also called
“natural” coffee.
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