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| Friday, May 09, 2008 | ||||||||||||||
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About Kona Coffee The History of Kona Coffee Reverend Samuel Ruggles moved trees to Captain Cook, Kona, on the "Big Island" of Hawaii in 1828. In the late 1800’s, efforts to establish coffee plantations in Kona fell victim to economics. Presently Kona Coffee is raised in an area 20 miles long and 2miles wide on the slopes of Hualalai and Mauna Loa. The area contains approximately 600 independent farms. Farm sizes on Kona average 3 acres each with a few farms of 50+ acres. Total Kona coffee acreage is over 2000 acres and annual production is generally over two million pounds. Elevation ranges from 500 to 3,000 feet. Kona Coffee is still painstakingly grown and hand picked in limited quantities. At the turn of the century there was coffee on all the major islands. There are 6,500 acres under cultivation statewide, with annual production running between 6 and 7 million pounds of green bean. Different varieties are grown throughout the state. Most common is Typica grown in Kona.In order to protect the public from counterfeit Hawaiian coffees , the State of Hawaii Department of Agriculture began certifying all Hawaiian coffees, by origin (island – district) in 1997. What is an "ESTATE" coffee and why should I care?An ESTATE coffee is a coffee whose beans are grown and marketed by a single farm. Estate coffee beans are not mixed with beans from other farms, thereby ensuring quality and consistency in taste from year to year and cup to cup. |
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