Posted on 12/09/2005 2:30:19 PM PST by StoneWallJack
The Palm Civet or marsupial luwak of Indonesia a tree climbing animal that ranges in weight from three to ten pounds uses its sense of smell and eyesight to seek out its favorite treat the ripest coffee cherries. The Palm Civet or Luwak passes the cherry through the digestive track where the beans exit the animal basically intact. The beans are then patiently harvested from the forest floor near coffee plantations carefully cleaned and roasted.
The beans are usually given a light to dark roast to avoid destruction of the complex flavors which have developed through the process. This unique processing is said to give the resulting coffee a rich, heavy flavor with some hints of caramel or chocolate. Some other words used to describe this cup of joe by those fortunate enough to try it have been earthy, musty and exotic with syrupy body and smooth flavor.
The University of Guelph did a study in which they examined the chemical and physical properties of the Kopi Luwak coffee bean and compared them to that of a regular coffee bean. Their results are quite interesting. They found the unroasted Kopi Luwak coffee beans had more red and yellow tones than a Columbian coffee bean. They also found the Kopi Luwak gourmet coffee bean to have less total protein, less bacterial count, some pitting on the surface of the coffee bean and different compounds. This may explain why the Kopi Luwak coffee is said to be less bitter and have a different aroma than other gourmet coffee.
Although this gourmet coffees exact date of discovery is not known. The strange origins of this rare gourmet coffee make it labor-intensive and time-consuming to produce. Gourmet coffee lovers are willing to pay a premium for this rare and exotic blend and consider it worth the effort and trouble involved. Here is your chance to be among the few who have tried Kopi Luwak coffee. We have been able to secure a small quantity of Kopi Luwak coffee at a substantial discount and once sold out we do not know when we will be able to procure more.
On rare occasion I'll have an iced coffee at Starbucks.
Some people will buy anything.
Hey I agree with you again! First I take your tag line from another thred then I have to agree with your taste in coffee.!!
Welcome to FR btw!
CD
Roast your own at home and enter what we like to call "Coffee Heaven".
Seriously, if you're a big fan of coffee (like me) you can buy the best Arabica beans green, and then roast them yourself for about what you pay for the best (stale) coffee in the store. You'll get the absolute freshest possible, and roasted to your exact liking.
"Seriously, if you're a big fan of coffee..."
Tell me more ...
Yep, I highly recommend 8 o'clock whole bean for a great brew (and it's fairly cheap too.)
1/4 tsp seems like too much to me, I have good results with just a few grains of salt. Like maybe one tip of the salt shaker. This takes the bitterness away nicely.
Coffee ping
Well, I can say that my coffee isn't that bad.
Roasting details please. Where do you buy the green Arabica beans?
Start here and step into the dark side...
http://www.coffeegeek.com/forums/coffee/homeroast
Roasting my own since 2003. There's no going back.
My favorite green coffee bean sources.
http://www.coffeebeancorral.com/
Good education here
http://www.sweetmarias.com/
Here's my favorite coffee roasting system
http://turbocrazy.atspace.com/
Being (almost) a Seattleite, there are espresso stands everywhere.
ONCE I tried a regular plain olde no frills espresso from a stand near my house.
Repulsive!! Undrinkable!!
The thing is, most everything they sell is flavoured with the syrups, so they can get away with buying the cheapest beans they can find.
I always buy my beans whole, grind them right before use, and brew it at almost triple strength.
NEVER Starburnt's though.
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