Coffee. wonderful world of caffeine

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Coffee wonderful world of caffeine

Botany Family Rubiaceae Genus Coffea- a pantropical genus with up to 60 species. Not frost tolerant, growth stops below 15 C. Three main species are C. Arabica, C. canephora, C. Liberica. They do not cross pollinate. Leaves are opposite, and evergreen do not drop at end of season. Two types of branches, vertical, horizontal or lateral. Shrub to tree generally up to 4-5 m, but some species like C. liberica up to 10 m.

Coffea liberica Little commercial production, but a selection called Fukunaga formerly known as Dewevrei is used as a rootstock in Kona for protection from nematodes.

Coffea canephora This commonly known by an old variety name Robusta, higher in caffeine but lower taste quality than Arabica. It is more adapted to warmer areas, and generally considered more pest and disease resistant. Flowers are open pollinated, so propagation is by cuttings. Seed rounder and less green.

Coffea Arabica This is what we grow in Hawaii, highest taste (cup) quality and the dominant coffee species in production. Tree is more single stem that robusta, leaves not as ridged, seed is longer and more green.

2005 World Coffee Production 7.3 M Mt from 83 countries Brazil 2.41 M Mt Vietnam 0.75 M Mt Indonesia 0.76 M Mt Colombia 0.69 M Mt US 0.0032 M Mt

Movement of Arabica coffee

Hawaii s past production Million pounds of green coffee

Old style harvest Note taller trees and school kids picking during Kona summer vacation.

Hawaii yields 3500 3000 2500 2000 1500 1000 500 0 1870 1890 1910 1930 1950 1970 1990 2010 Green bean lbs/acre 1600 1400 1200 1000 800 600 400 Kona Other islands 200 0 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 Green bean lbs/acre

Hawaii s Coffee Appellations

Factors affecting quality Site Variety Nutrition Pest Pruning Disease Harvest Processing Handling

Site Not too hot - windward sea level OK but leeward at sea level is too hot, use shade Objective is slow down the growth rate for larger and denser beans. Not too cold -windward under 2000 OK leeward under 2800 OK Objective is no frost, plants grow well, no yearround flowering.

Variety Guatemala or Kona typica is still your best quality in Hawaii. Mokka has a good cup but very small bean size and very low yield potential. Breeding programs around the world are now focusing on improving quality. HARC & CTAHR are evaluating crosses to improve the quality of the Catuai varieties with Mokka.

Kona Environment Temperature Temperature not elevation is factor of importance, best averages are 59 low to 77F high 1500 ft in Kona is equivalent to 3900 ft in Colombia At Kona Experiment Station 1500 ft, temperatures averages 69F (20C) year round, average low is 60F, average high is 78F. Kona Coffee belt lies between 700 and 2000 ft

Kona Environment Rainfall-target 60 inches/ yr 10 9 Kona Exp Station, Kainaliu Rainfall (inches) 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Eleele, Kauai 0 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Month

Kona Environment Soil Coffee grows best in well drained, volcanic soils Kona soils are very young, of recent volcanic activity with a high organic matter between the crumbled lava rock known as a a

Kona Environment Light intensity- Shade Coffee evolved in the mountain dry forests of Ethiopia Sun grown coffee in sunny locations requires fertilizer to prevent over-production that can kill trees Typical weather in Kona: sunny mornings and cloudy afternoons

Nursery grown vs pulapula Planting Nursery grown strongly recommended Plant in field at 12-14 months old Stronger root system, prevent the spread of nematodes

Variety Planting Guatemalan or Kona typica known for high quality Other varieties like Yellow Catuai grown on Kauai are not common in Kona

Planting Spacing Various configurations dependent on management choices and elevation 8 x 8 spacing, 680 trees/a 5 x 9 spacing, 968 trees/a 6 x 12 spacing, 605 trees/a Mechanical harvest 2.5 x 12, 1450 trees/a 5 x 12 is better.

Pruning Kona style vs. Beaumont -Fukunaga Moderate pruning every year. Severe pruning after 4 years.

Pruning Kona style Vertical stems and age 2 3 4 2 1 Each vertical stem is a different age, usually 1 to 4 years old. Each year the oldest vertical is removed. Age of wood 1 3 4 Lateral branch Stump is many years old.

Beaumont -Fukunaga Pruning All verticals on stump are same age, but each stump has different age verticals Each stump is pruned every four years. 1 2 3 4 Age of vertical stems on each stump

Pruning CTAHR hedge Top cut 1.5 m (5 ft) Sides cuts so 1.5 m wide Yearly top to allow 0.5 m (18 inch) new top growth A tractor-mounted sickle bar pruner 10ft long with 3 teeth

Nutrition In general a well growing tree that does not drop its old leaves before harvest is your goal. If both the old leaves and new leaves are gone at harvest or worst -before harvest, then you ve lost quality- beans maybe smaller (lower grade), less dense - poorer cup, or ripened too early or died.

Overbearing dieback Competition between vegetative and reproductive growth. Coffee does not control fruit set. Excess vegetative growth in 2003 leads to excessive flowering in 2004, big crop,and little growth, in 2005 small crop large growth. Both old and new leaves dropped. Lateral begins dying from tip to vertical. Coffee ripens too early or dies.

Causes of overbearing dieback Insufficient sugars produced by leaves to grow the cherry, so the cherry eats the leaves! Drought between flowering and full size fruit reduces leaf production. Nutrient deficiency especially N reduces the sugar production of the leaves even as late as cherry ripening. Root damage from low ph, j root, or nematode reduces nutrients and/or water in leaves. Scale and black twig borer damage leaves.

Conventional 1600-2000 lb/a/yr. High potassium needed Fertilization

Organic Fertilization Higher lb/a needed as less nutrient dense Additional materials such as manure, compost

Fertilization Monitoring Leaf and Soil nutrient analysis Annual sampling Fertilizer recommendation based on test results

Irrigation If rainfall during fruit development to ripening is less than 6 inches a month irrigation will benefit yields. Drip irrigation is best for our trade wind conditions. Fertigation is recommended to reduce cost.

Weeds Insects Green scale Black Twig Borer Pests Nematodes and Disease Kona Coffee Root knot Nematode Anthracnose

Weeds Pests Weed control is essential the first year Control by cutting, herbicides -RoundUp, even geese In mature fields tall grass,trees, vines, and volunteer coffee seedlings can be serious

Insects Green scale Pests Most serious insect especially first 2 years, sucks sap from leaves arrived in late 1890s. White halo fungus introduced 1910, kills scale in rainy season in Kona. Control soaps & oils. Ant bait stations.

Pests: Insects Black Twig Borer Less serious, arrive 1960 s, beetle kills branch Prune flagging laterals below the hole, burn, shred, or compost the laterals. Fruit beyond the hole ripen prematurely.

Nematodes and Disease Kona Coffee Rootknot Nematode damage to roots Kona typica is scion, Fukunaga is rootstock

Deficiencies & excesses Water and nutrient uptake affected How the nematode works Adequate nutrient level in soil

Years to maturity Yields Labor Harvest Converting cherry to roasted coffee

Harvest Years to maturity Very small crops in the 1 st and 2 nd years after planting Economic harvest in the 3 rd year Fully mature in 6 th year after planting

Yields Harvest Mature trees yield 12-15 lb cherry/tree 8,160-10,200 lb/a cherry with 680 trees/a potential is 40,000 lb/a with Catuai

Harvest Ripe cherry only, if you can t squeeze out the parchment bean don t pick it. Beans from immature coffee weigh less and have inferior flavor. Separate unripe, ripe, and over ripe.

Harvesting Labor if done by hand as on Hawaii 4-8 rounds/season Pickers can harvest 200-400 lb cherry/day Labor is 50% cost of production. If 10,000 lb cherry/a in 4 harvests and 300 lb /picker/day then 33 d/a/yr or 8 d/a per round, assume need 2 pickers per acre to finish a round in less than a week

Mechanical $130K new 180 to 400 A per season Cost over long term is 10% of hand harvest/a. Harvest

Processing Converting cherry to roasted coffee 500 lbs of cherry, which when pulped will be 125 lbs of parchment, which when hulled will be 100 lbs of green bean, which when roasted will be... 80 lbs of roasted coffee

Processing Wet, Dry, and in between Wet processing involves pulping (removing the skin of the cherry), soaking the mucilage covered seed in water, rinsing the seed after 12-16 hours to remove the mucilage, drying the parchment covered seed (parchment coffee), hulling (milling the parchment coffee) to get green coffee. Dry processing is drying the cherry, and hulling the dried cherry to green coffee. In between is pulping and immediate demucilaging, drying and hulling.

Initial processing- 3 ways Wet processing Low water pulping, no fermentation Dry processing, dry fruit

Roasting Essential to realize coffee flavor Coffee at 10% moisture Roaster at 218 to 230 C Time 10 to 20 minutes Immediately cool Bag when cool if using valved bag. Initially absorbs heat, later releases heat as it burns. Roasts are classified by color, Cupping is very light brown, French is quite dark

Cupping- organoleptic evaluation Weigh grounds ( 0.055g/mL or 5.5 g/ 4 oz. cup), smell, add boiling water, remove floating grounds at 2 mins, Taste at 5 mins.

Coffee Brewing Automatic Drip Manual Drip Press pot Vacuum pot Moka pot Neaplolitan flip Percolator Cold brew Espresso Aeropress Clover Mediterranean style Cowboy coffee

Neapolitan Flip Moka Pot Clover Ibrik Aeropress Vacuum Pot

Brewing Percolator- coffee is boiled and repeatedly dripped through grounds. Drip- hot water dripped through grounds and paper or metal screen once. Press pot- hot water poured over coffee, stirred, then metal screen pushed to bottom, forcing brew through the grounds. Espresso- boiling water under 1 atmosphere pressure forced through grounds and metal screen. Aeropress- hot water poured onto grounds, pressed through grounds and paper filter.

Need more information? Growing Coffee in Hawaii Read it on the web at www.ctahr.hawaii.edu/fb or Order it from the web www2.ctahr.hawaii.edu/ctahr2001/ w click on Publications