
About Lola Cafe
THE ROAST, THE ORIGIN AND THE PROCESS
THE ROAST
Our master roasters have developed a blend that enhances the qualities of its origin and gives yoy a balanced cup of coffee with hints of citric fruits and berries as well as sweet notes of chocolate. The rich aromas that reside in our Medium-Dark Roast are sweeter and nuttier with overtones of chocolate, honey, maple syrup, roasted almonds and hazelnuts, peanuts, pecans, vanilla and toasted butter. Our Medium Roast exhibits a nice balance of aroma, acidity, and harmonious flavors consisting of blueberries, strawberries, hibiscus, tangerine, mandarin, apricot, rose, jasmine, pomegranate, cardamom, and coriander seeds.
THE ORIGIN
Our company's goal is to bring out customers the highest quality mexican speciality coffee, and at the same time working with mexican indigenous coffee farmers so that they understand and develop thechniques to procedure speciality quality coffee and become a self sustainable community with strong values oriented to protecting the environment. We buy directly from the farmers who get a larger income due to the elimination of middle men and the higher quality processed coffee beans.
Café carey "Pluma Hidalgo Oaxaca" is a shade grown mountain coffee from the southern sierra mountains in the pacific coast of Oaxaca; with Physical characteristics that include 1,500 millimeters average annual rainfall, farms located between 950 to 1,500 meters above sea level and average temperature of 20 to 24 degrees celsius.The unique microclimate created by combination of high altitude mountain climate with a constant sea breeze from the pacific ocean that wraps the coffee trees almost every day of the year, result in a unique coffee cup with mild acidity and great sweetness.
Our master roasters have developed a blend that enhances these qualities that give you a balanced cup of coffee with hints of citric fruit and berries as well as sweet notes of chocolate.Our Medium Roast exhibits a nice balance of aroma, acidity, and harmonious flavors consisting of blueberries, strawberries, hibiscus, tangerine, mandarin, apricot, rose, jasmine, pomegranate, cardamom, and coriander seeds.
THE PROCESS
From the Seed to the CupHigh on a lush, steep hillside covered with coffee trees, a picker carries a heavy bag filled with a long day's work. The bag contains ripe, red coffee cherries. Months from now, the beans from that day's harvest might be the very ones you purchase at your favorite store. Between the time that they were picked and purchased, the beans went through a series of steps very much like this.
1. PLANTING
2. HARVESTING THE CHERRIES
Only the ripe cherries are harvested and they are picked individually by hand. Pickers rotate among the trees every 8 - 10 days, choosing only the cherries which are at the peak of ripeness. Because this kind of harvest is labor-intensive, and thus more costly, it is used primarily to harvest the finer arabica beans.In most coffee-growing countries, there is one major harvest a year; though in countries like Columbia there are two flowerings a year - a main and secondary crop. A good picker averages approximately 100 to 200 pounds of coffee cherries a day, which will produce 20 to 40 pounds of coffee beans. At the end of a day of picking, each worker's harvest is carefully weighed and each picker is paid on the merit of his or her work. The day's harvest is then combined and transported to the processing plant.
3. PROCCESING THE CHERRIES
We Use The Wet Method In wet method processing, the pulp is removed from the coffee cherry after harvesting and the bean is dried with only the parchment skin left on. There are several actual steps involved. First, the freshly harvested cherries are passed through a pulping machine where the skin and pulp is separated from the bean. The pulp is washed away with water, usually to be dried and used as mulch. The beans are separated by weight as they are conveyed through water channels, the lighter beans floating to the top, while the heavier, ripe beans sink to the bottom.Next they are passed through a series of rotating drums which separate them by size.After separation, the beans are transported to large, water-filled fermentation tanks. Depending on a combination of factors - such as the condition of the beans, the climate and the altitude - they will remain in these tanks for anywhere from 12 to 48 hours. The purpose of this process is to remove the slick layer of mucilage (called the parenchyma) that is still attached to the parchment; while resting in the tanks, naturally occurring enzymes will cause this layer to dissolve. When fermentation is complete the beans will feel rough, rather than slick, to the touch. At that precise moment, the beans are rinsed by being sent through additional water channels. They are then ready for drying.
4. DRYING THE BEANS
5. MILLING THE BEANS
Machines are used to remove the parchment layer (endocarp) from wet processed coffee. Hulling dry, processed coffee refers to removing the entire dried husk -- the exocarp, mesocarp & endocarp -- of the dried cherries.
Polishing
This is an optional process in which any silver skin that remains on the beans after hulling is removed in a polishing machine. While polished beans are considered superior to unpolished ones, in reality there is little difference between the two.
Grading & Sorting
Before being exported, the coffee beans will be even more precisely sorted by size and weight. They will also be closely evaluated for color flaws or other imperfections.Typically, the bean size is represented on a scale of 10 to 20. The number represents the size of a round hole's diameter in terms of 1/64's of an inch. A number 10 bean would be the approximate size of a hole in a diameter of 10/64 of an inch and a number 15 bean, 15/64 of an inch.
Beans are sized by being passed through a series of different sized screens. They are also sorted pneumatically by using an air jet to separate heavy from light beans.Next defective beans are removed. Though this process can be accomplished by sophisticated machines, in many countries, it is done by hand while the beans move along an electronic conveyor belt. Beans of unsatisfactory size, color, or that are otherwise unacceptable, are removed. This might include over-fermented beans, those with insect damage or those that are unhulled. In many countries, this process is done both by machine and hand, insuring that only the finest quality coffee beans are exported.
6. EXPORTING THE BEANS
7. TASTING THE COFFEE
The objective is to spray the coffee evenly over the cupper's taste buds, and then "weigh" it before spitting it out. Samples from a variety of batches and different beans are tasted daily. Coffees are not only analyzed this way for their inherent characteristics and flaws, but also for the purpose of blending different beans or determining the proper roast. An expert cupper can taste hundreds of samples of coffee a day and still taste the subtle differences between them.
8. ROASTING THE COFFEE
This process, called pyrolysis is at the heart of roasting. It is what produces the flavor and aroma of the coffee we drink. When the beans are removed from the roaster, they are immediately cooled either by air or water. Roasting is generally performed in the importing countries because freshly roasted beans must reach the consumer as quickly as possible.
