Showing posts with label locate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label locate. Show all posts

May 27, 2013

Lien Saigon - Vietnamese Weasel Coffee

 I received this coffee as a gift following a mission trip. After doing some research I found some interesting facts about this Vietnamese coffee.  Apparently the story goes that this Vietnamese coffee is similar to the Kopi Luwak process instead of being digested by a civet, it is digested by weasel. This process is said to reduce bitterness and create a smooth brew. However Vietnamese companies also claim to have replicated the digestive process with an enzyme. 
     We prepare this coffee with Hario v60 pour-over and a clever coffee dripper. The first thing to notice was the beans were roasted extremely dark very similar to a French roast and the surface of the beans were covered in oil. While the aroma was intensely smoky it did have an uncharacteristically very sweet buttery caramel aroma. I was very hesitant to make this coffee as it appeared that it had been soaked in a fragrant oil.  With the first sip, the coffee was extremely smooth with very little aftertaste. If it was true this coffee passed through a digestive process, it really diminished the palate cleansing acidity for this cup.  Both batches of coffee produced a very slick oily surface even with using an able cone filter with the pour-over, and a #4 filter with the coffee dripper.  Instinctively the coffee paired well with a soft Caramel sauce that included butter and vanilla bean in the ingredients. 
    When the coffee cooled I finally figured out what it reminded me of: Burnt kettle corn. While I enjoy tasting this coffee for broad exposure, it affirmed to me the importance of tasting wide varieties of food to get an accurate experience on the palate.

March 18, 2012

Kenya Nyeri Gatomboya Peaberry

Exotic Complexity - We were intrigued just by the thought of purchasing and roasting a Kenya peaberry coffee to see how dynamic the cup would be. Just the description of what the final taste could be teased us for 24 hrs as we let the fresh coffee de-gas. We knew peaberry are rare and coming from Kenya after some research peaberry is only about 6% of the entire crop. These beans are from Nyeri region and Gatomboya is a coffee wet mill where the coffee cherries are washed, pulped, fermented, washed and then dried.
Kenyan coffees as we know are the heavyweights of east African coffee and usually roasters use Kenyan coffees as a benchmark for comparing quality.
     We roasted this coffee ourselves this time using a plain ol' rival popcorn popper from your local vendor. They are nice and plump in the raw form and appeared slightly larger after roasting.  We took this coffee to a full city roast as documented on the left.  After letting the coffee sit overnight we took it for a course grind and noticed a very exotic fruit aroma. 
     As we let the grounds bloom for a minute with 8 oz. of water the aroma intensified and gave off a thick jam like scent of berry and possibly mango.  On first slurp these beans shine with an acidity that lights up your palate front to back and dissipates quickly with a mango/apricot flavor rolling in afterward.  Scents of red berries interestingly took over as the cup cooled and the acidity became balanced with the smooth body.  This coffee is very similar to a 3-piece jazz ensemble when it comes to complexity. It was clean as it cooled, bright up front when it was hot, fleshy stone fruit flavor in the beginning, exotic and berry tasting as it cooled.  We paired this Kenyan coffee with Raspberry chocolate cake.  The raspberry flavor gave the coffee a sweet delicate red berry taste with a subtly tart finish.