how is coffee grown

How is Coffee Grown

The question how is coffee grown, has quite an interesting answer, and the journey the coffee that you have every morning has been described in the paragraphs that follow. To know more about coffee cultivation, read on.

From the lush green coffee cultivation of Colombia to the misty mountains of Coorg and South India, coffee producers all over the world practice coffee production as an art, rather than a discipline of science. Coffee production can be classified into three distinct phases, namely, one cultivation, two, the processing and roasting and three, the preparation of the beverage. Coffee cultivators who are found in handful of regions, pride themselves to be master artists of the process that gives us the small two sectioned brown bean, often crushed to powder, which we dearly enjoy and are addictively temped by. Folklore places the origins of coffee in unknown period, but we do know it was discovered by shepherds in modern-day Ethiopia, following which it traveled to the Arab world, Central Asia, India and on the other side to Europe and then Americans. 'It is an art! No stupid machine can do it, especially those idiotic metal boxes that you use nowadays!', such an outburst from Ishmael, a Dutch-Indian coffee grower in the Kodagu (Coorg) is quite common. Ishmael is no fan of commonly found coffee machines. The enormous disapproving frown from his shiny bald head vanishes and is replaced with a fond, loving look as he described a fairytale of how coffee is grown. The wrinkled 80-year old man is an encyclopedia of information on coffee. 'Cariappa (Legendary Field Marshall of the Indian army from Coorg) would declare war on coffee machines if he saw how you drink it now. Mechanical nonsense! Ha!'. Coffea: Growing Coffee Coffea is a genus with more than 90 species within it, two of which are prominently used to harvest coffee beans which we use today. These include Robusta and Arabica. Coffee plantations are disciplined plantations which are used to uniformly plant the coffee shrub and properly harvest it. Now several time frames regarding coffee cultivation are not exactly precise as the natural conditions such as weather and soil are not the same throughout the world.
  • Conventionally coffee plants thrive the best in tropical and equatorial regions and accept monsoon prone climate as ideal.
  • From the physical geographical point of view, regions with an elevation between 3,600 feet to 8,000 feet are most suited for its growth.
  • The soil structure which suits any coffee plant the best is igneous or any kind of volcanic soils.
These exact conditions are found in very less regions of the world and owing to the dissimilarities and non-congruency in the conditions, coffee from almost different plantations tends to have certain different characteristics. The usual process of growing coffee goes as follows.
  • A coffee plant is principally a shrub which can potentially grow into a large tree of well over 10 feet height. In fact a naturally growing coffee plant on an average touches the benchmark of 10-12 feet. In the plantations however, coffee plants are continuously cut short and kept down to a height of about 6 feet or so in order to facilitate harvesting.
  • After being planted coffee plants take about 3-5 years in order to reach a level of growth or maturity upon which they can start bearing fruit.
  • On an average, coffee plants start bearing blossoms sometimes at the start of spring. These blossoms are white in color having a strong resemblance to jasmine flowers, however the volume of white blossoms is much more than that of the jasmine flowers. These flowers which have a life of about a day or two, eventually give away or get converted into coffee cherries.
  • Coffee cherries are chiefly red or green and they are from miniature to quite a big size, ripening completely at the end of about 9 months in the fall/Autumn. In fact these drupes are very similar to our normal cherries, even by size.
  • Once the fall starts, and the 'cherries' start to ripen, plantation owners and cherry growers hire 'pickers' to harvest or rather pick the cherries. In case of coffee cherries, picking, though slow is the preferred form of harvesting as cherries need to be picked only once they are sufficiently ripe. Coffee pickers surf around the plantation looking for perfectly ripe cherries, continuing the process till the plant bears new flower or fruit. On an average a single pickers accumulates about 6 baskets or so. Though mechanical harvesting is possible, growers of coffee, choose to use manual labor, as growing coffee, is an art of the man's hand.
Please note that in some regions larger and taller trees are planted to protect the coffee plant. Depending upon several factors such as elevation height, plant and even the geographical features, coffee beans can be processed into several types of coffee. After the coffee fruit is picked, the bean within is brought out. For this two methods can be used, namely dry and wet. The dry method, of course means drying off the fruit along with its pulp, skin and on the other hand, the wet method means washing off and fermenting off the same. Following this, the coffee beans are roasted and then ground up. The bean is actually a legume and not a bean. But this very legume is very precious as annually a plant yields about single pound of coffee beans, which are later ground up to give you the coffee powder that freshens you up in the mornings and gloomy evenings.

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