| Did
you know that coffee starts out as a cherry?
A coffee cherry, that is. What we call the
“coffee bean” is actually the
seeds of the fruit of the coffee tree. The
cherries grow in clusters along the tree branches
and turn bright red when they’re ripe
for harvest. Coffee is generally picked by
hand.
Kona
Coffee, the kind Rina grew on her farm, comes
from only one place in the world -- the Kona
district on the west side of Hawai'i Island
(the Big Island). It’s grown mostly
on small coffee farms like the one in Midnight
Sea, many of them owned by the same families
for generations. What makes Kona Coffee so
special? It’s the unique combination
of sunny mornings and misty afternoons plus
the sheltered location and volcanic soil.
Coffee
first came to the Hawaiian islands from Rio
de Janeiro in about 1825 and made it to Kona
by about 1828. They discovered that the unique
climate of the Kona region was perfect for
growing coffee and before long, Kona coffee’s
distinctive flavor became world-famous. By
1866 it had captured the attention of none
other than Mark Twain, who wrote in his Letters
From Hawaii that “Kona coffee has
a richer flavor than any other, be it grown
where it may and call it by what name you
please."
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