Coffee is also something, like chocolate, that is so far removed between finished product and raw materiel that it is so easy to lose sight of how much time and effort it does take to grow it for sure Granted, this is NOTHING even remotely close to the people who have to grow the coffee themselves, but every time I see the coffee tree at my local botanic garden's conservatory, i do think about that a lot...how much effort goes into making the fruits of that tree into the cup of coffee i drink every morning Chocolate and black pepper are others i think about quite a bit
For sure ! After brewing my first batch of beer and working on wine, mead etc. I really admire the work people put into growing grain, taking care of yeast cultures etc.
Coffee is usually best 1-2 weeks after roasting - it usually "off-gasses" quite a bit after you first roast it, so it needs to sit in a non-airtight container while the CO2 escapes the roasted beans. otherwise the coffee made with SUPER fresh roasted coffee will taste pretty acidic and "grassy". Also, those old school popcorn "whirly pop" makers are GREAT at roasting coffee. Be sure to look online about "first crack" and "second crack" - the beans will literally start making "cracking" or "popping" noises (and jump around) once once you hit a light/medium roast and a 2nd softer crack when you hit darker roasts. The rabbit hole goes deep so just experiment with some unroasted green coffee if you want to get started! Sweet Marias is a fantastic resource to look up!
@@sethtreydefinitely sign of underdeveloped roast. Meaning they ended the roast too quickly giving vegetal, grains/cereal, and grassy notes. You were paying for wrongly roasted coffee haha. Off gassing (c02) just helps the coffee taste less acidic (removal of carbonic acid) and clearer (clarity refers to you being able to taste the flavor profile that the coffee claims to have)
Loved the video, Kevin! I’m definitely a coffee nerd so I wanted to mention that coffee roasters will “rest” their freshly roasted coffee beans because they tend to give off mainly green and vegetal tasting notes. Seems counter-intuitive, but you really want 1-2 week old roasted coffee, to get the best flavor. That could have been why your coffee tasted so green!
True! Another purpose of resting the beans is to let them off-gas. That is, right after roasting there's tons of pent-up CO2 in the beans and if you give them some time to let those gasses escape, it'll taste better
Love this! I’ve been growing my own coffee, here in Brookings, Oregon, since 2011. We have an interesting micro-climate here. My coffee “tree” flowers almost 2-3 times a year, & has a lot of coffee fruit (coffee cherries.) right at this moment, in September. It’s in a greenhouse, with my Cardamon, Ginger, Black Pepper, & Ayahuasca vines. Cheers! ❤
I live in florence and didn’t even think to try it, I just assumed it couldn’t be done Guess ill have to give it a “shot” (hah see what I did there) Is your greenhouse heated?
@@dragonborn5740 hey neighbor! Love Florence! Yeah, my coffee tree is inside a greenhouse, but i only use heat in the late fall/winter months. I just use one of those portable oil radiator style heaters, with the thermostat turned to one quarter power; just to take the edge off the colder temps. The passive solar heat from the greenhouse gets crazy in the summer months, & I use an automated misting system, & a fan to regulate it. Cheers!
When I lived in the Dominican Republic my friend had coffee trees and cacao so we made coffee and chocolate. It is quite a bit of work so that was why people just bought their coffee in the colmado (local store). They have the best tasting coffee in the world (in my opinion).
Awesome!! I grew up in Puerto Rico and my grandpa had a small orchard, which had a few coffee shrubs. You have to let the bean dry for a few days, then roast it. Otherwise it won't taste good. The husks are good as addendum to the soil too, just like the ground coffe once you brew it. And "cáscara" has the accent sound on the first a. 😁 Keep up the good work! 💪🏽🥰
Agree that the popcorn air popper is great for roasting a small amount of beans. I would wait until first crack when you hear them pop to get a solid medium roast :)
sad times, one of my coffee plants was killed by my dog last year just as it flowered, with the other 2 dying in the spring from root rot as they were a few months away from maturity, all grown from beans. will have to start again, maybe with some more beans, and certainly more knowledge on growing, but since im trying to grow coffee in scotland of all places im surprised I even got that far on a first attempt.
I watched this video as I was enjoying my morning coffee. Thanks for the info, Kevin. I've roasted some beans myself and what I found works really well is an electric popcorn maker, which uses hot air to spin/stir popcorn kernels. This gives a much better coffee roast consistency due to the heat being relatively evenly distributed. I based this on what a coffee roaster once told me; "all you need is heat and rotation."
Thanks for the coffee history story, and really cute cartoon going along with it❤ I just bought some coffee seeds from eden brothers, a relatively local garden place for myself here in NC. I'm excited to start growing it myself. Something about growing your very own cup of homegrown coffee just sounds GOOD! ❤
Hi I live in Jamaica and I love your channel. I get the blue mountain coffee from a farmer. think the mistake you made was that there is a chaff that is covering the beans that after you fry them in the sun they cak off. then you can roast your beans. cheers Janice from Jamaica
I can't wait until the day that I can have a greenhouse and be able to grow exotic plants like this. Here in Toronto I need to overwinter my plants either in my house or the garage. Currently its the garage but with the really cold weather we have I had a lot of plants die on me (Peppers mainly) so I need to find a better solution before I can branch out to something like coffee. Hope you get more beans in the coming years and as with all gardening, harvesting and prep of the fruit it will get better over the years and more enjoyable!
I actually never heard of the fermenting. I've seen many shows including dangerous grounds and the people who pick the beans they usually wash them I thought so they do the dehusking and washing process. From there I remember seeing them do an air dry for quite a few days kind of out in the open and then sifting through to get the final bean. 🎉🎉❤
Normally coffee is "wet hulled", where the seed is extracted from the fruit and endocarp before drying and then roasting. What he did would probably be called a "honey process", with most of the fruit removed but the still wet seed is left to ferment a little bit before it fully dries and is dehulled. There's also "natural process", where the cherry is fully sun dried before dehulling, giving the seed multiple days to ferment in the fruit. Natural process tends to give fermented fruit notes, like pineapple or strawberry. Honey process gives just a hint of those flavours.
I have arabica plant at home for about a year now. I dont drink coffee but my mum cant wait to try coffee from home. Its nice looking plant too, with the "waxed' leaves
I am so excited to see this video. I have to plants, planted in ground here in Antigua. They are approx 18 months old. I can’t wait to reach this point.
Wow! Never thought of growing coffee tree in a green house. Awesome 👏🏻 Our village (about 700m from sea level) is one of Robusta producers in Indonesia. The majority of villagers grow coffee and rice, some grow cacao and vanilla. It takes a lot of efforts and care for good harvest. June -August every year will be harvest season. We’ll get around 700-800 gr medium roasted beans for every 1000 gr green beans.
I don't know enough about coffee roasting to offer advice, but from other videos I've seen, I think that oven roasting would be your best bet(without additional equipment). It may provide that even distribution and slower roasting for drying the bean out more and giving a fuller, more even roast profile. Very interesting experiment nonetheless :)
I love the videos like these where u are trying something for the first time! That's what's so great about gardening, u can be a mid level or master gardener even and still discover new things by growing and making something you never have before. Such a fun journey!
The nurse in me knows that we give cascara as a laxative. I had a moment of worry for you then googled it. It's comes from a different souvenir. Cascara simply means the outer layer/bark. Fun video. I love coffee but doubt it will try to grow it. We are blessed to have local roasters.
I cant wait to do this! A few questions tho... 1. Did you dry the green beans after fermenting or roast straight away? Also, I've been gifted a bag of coffee cherries that have been stored in a freezer... 1. Can I still grow a new coffee bean bush from beans that have been frozen? 2. Will freezing affect the final taste of the coffee?
❤ Kevin!! Congratulations on growing your own coffee! That has to be the best tasting coffee, the freshest you can get! All of that hard work is worth it in the end to get the freshest available. As a side note, the beans that float in the water are just sold as a lower grade coffee because they didn't mature enough to have a growth node in the center, so it's still empty and won't grow a baby coffee tree. It still tastes like a good coffee, just a lower grade. You can separate them, roast them separately, and then brew them to taste the difference. Or just roast them and save them in a jar for a later date, but taste goes down over time. Love the video, great work! ❤❤
I bought c cup of coffee plants from IKEA, I transplanted them today into individual pots and I find your video, fantastic, I’m so glad I saw this because I put them into different sub😮 Columbus Ohio arabica in three years.
Never knew the cascara was used. What I used to see is, after the cherries are peeled, the coffee is set to the sun to dry. After that you smash a bit with what's called in Spanish "a pilón" to get the grain inside. Usually that is cleaned with air, venting the slightly smashed beans. Then after that is roasted. PD. I'm not a coffee expert but i trying to describe what my grandpa used to do with his coffee in Puerto Rico. Yes, the process vary from place to place
I'm at 200' above sea level, so Robusta is the one I'm going to grow. Thank you for all the information! Are you going to grow more plants so you can have a full cup next time? Please keep us updated on what you learn, this is interesting.
You can grow dandelion like the ones you see in your yard. Make sure to not pull from areas that get their yards sprayed with pesticides and stuff. You find it and pull it out with the root and can dehydrate/bake the root and grind it and you have natural coco/coffee or coco powder and the whole dandelion plant is edible and is very healthy/ beneficial for you as in heart, blood pressure, and etc. you can also make fried dandelion nuggets by using the heads and put in batter with your seasoning choices and fried and it’s so good. Hope y’all try and enjoy this tip.
I have 4 little coffee plants but they haven’t fruited yet. I’m learning all about roasting in your comments section though, so I’ll be ready. Thanks! 😊
Artisanal coffee is usually picked when ripe. Cheaper mass produced coffee is picked all at once a couple times of year. Typically, the mucielage around the beans is fermented, sometimes skin on, mostly skin off.
Oddly I before watching this video I watched a video of 18th century reenactors that focused on food and cooking in the 1700's. One of these reenactors Owen a coffee company. In this coffee episode they say nothing about soaking the beans in water but they do talk about drying the beans. They also roast the beans very dark and talk about the beans cracking two times during the roast and that is how the hull is removed. Short answer: dry don't soak, roast very dark until the beans cracking twice, this removes the hull
One of our new graduate students here at San Diego State runs his own small batch coffee roaster. It's called Catalytic Coffee run by a guy named Joe. Maybe you can reach out and see if he has tips on home roasting!
I grow coffee here in San Luis Obispo, California. Mine is a dwarf type tree about 5 feet tall and does quite well growing in a pot underneath a tree fern. It's strictly a novelty but fun to grow.
I picked some coffee cherries off a random coffee bush on my walk, did the whole fermentation process and then roasting process. I did a light roast and oh my god it smelt amazing. I put the roasted beans in a little jar but then i forgot where i put it by the time i ordered a grinder 😢
The more you grow the more you know! After watching I realize I love green Matcha tea so this might be a win win! Ultimately, growing a Matcha tea leaf plant might prove wonderful for me! Ever thought to grow tea plants to harvest the leaves ...Ceremonial Grade Matcha Tea perhaps? That would be right down my alley for sure! Love your videos & keep up the hard work both physically, creatively and mentally!
I love your videos man. Nice relaxed style, great to see some experimenting. Your channel has been a big inspiration to change from lawn to fruits, vegetables and insect friendly plants :D Pulling a leek out of the garden for my morning eggs is bliss.
I could be wrong, I heard you need to allow the beans to rest for about two days after roasting? not sure. Definitely going to grab myself two trees, I'm in crazy south africa arabica grows well.
You have me convinced. I am going to ask the wife to go and buy several more bags of organic coffee at the co-op and put them in the freezer. I don't care what it costs because I ain't growing and processing my own. When we can't get it anymore and I run out I will have to switch to wine and brandy. I know how to make that myself and it sure takes a lot less work than taking care of that finicky plant and processing the coffee.
After watching this video, I forever will think of Jacques as having the body of a goat with blood shoot eyes munching on coffee plants. That is his true form.
We don't ferment the coffee beans. We pick them let them out to dry a couple of days. We roast them with cáscara on an open fire. We then vent it to get rid of the shaft. At that point you can lightly roast again if you want to. Then we grind and enjoy.
The origin story you made the fun video of starring Kevin the Goatherd and Jacques the Goat has been attributed to both the origins of coffee and qat.... Ethiopia and Yemen both star in both origin stories, but who knows where coffee and qat started first? We'll probably never know for sure, but thanks to those goats and goatherds for showing us the magic mocha. (Mocha comes from the Yemeni port city of Makha, where Yemen's cash crop was exported hundreds of years ago...)
Growing coffee is a thing of its own, especially in a colder climate After some research i found that tea bushes may survive the winters here though so that would be a great thing too
Please don’t go for dark roast with your coffee unless it’s not a great harvest quality wise. A light roast will let you taste the unique flavors of your plant more. Whole sale coffee is generally dark roast because it’s not from a single source so it mashes the flavors together. If you go through the effort, taste all the benefits.
Hey there. What you did was a washed process coffee. You really want to dry them first before roasting or the center will not develop (roast) during roasting due to high moisture content. Also, you need to hear cracking (first crack) before you stop roasting. You’re gonna have underdeveloped coffee if you stop too early
Not that I really know what I’m talking about, but when we went on a coffee tour on Hawaii island they dried their coffee beans flat in the open air for a few days before roasting them, turning them every few hours with a rake. They had it timed out perfectly because if it went even a little too long I guess they were ruined!
the nomadic movement youtubers started a coffee business the morning movement and you have to try it!!!! Roastery in Stowe, VA and just an epic story and channel. The tossing of the bag, you are truly epic!
Thank you for acknowledging the apocryphal nature of the story of the origin of coffee. The real story is much more interesting then that often told story. The podcast “empire” did a great episode on it if you are interested.
I don't think I have the patience to wait for coffee to grow, but I would love to grow tea. I don't consume as much tea and I hear it's pretty easy to grow.
coffee have similiar way of taste like wine, a terroir in wine also happen in coffee, in tropical region, we grow in under bit of shade, not on direct sunlight, it berry will rippen faster if hit by direct sunlight, not so good aroma from underipe seeds. soil also play key role in specific region taste
We have a coffee plant in San Diego in either 10a or 10b (haven’t checked the new charts) but it’s never seen a green house and is flourishing. If you want to see a picture of it or see it in person let me know. I have. A funny feeling we live within a few miles of you (based on all the queen palms in the backdrop of your videos). I have no idea how to instant message or otherwise so getting ahold of each other ought to be intersting
Gotta have a lot of respect for the coffee growers out there after seeing how much time and effort goes into it.
Coffee is also something, like chocolate, that is so far removed between finished product and raw materiel that it is so easy to lose sight of how much time and effort it does take to grow it for sure
Granted, this is NOTHING even remotely close to the people who have to grow the coffee themselves, but every time I see the coffee tree at my local botanic garden's conservatory, i do think about that a lot...how much effort goes into making the fruits of that tree into the cup of coffee i drink every morning
Chocolate and black pepper are others i think about quite a bit
For sure ! After brewing my first batch of beer and working on wine, mead etc. I really admire the work people put into growing grain, taking care of yeast cultures etc.
@@corywilliamsmith you make your own mead? that is badass!
Grown in its native soil is only less than half the hassle
Coffee is usually best 1-2 weeks after roasting - it usually "off-gasses" quite a bit after you first roast it, so it needs to sit in a non-airtight container while the CO2 escapes the roasted beans. otherwise the coffee made with SUPER fresh roasted coffee will taste pretty acidic and "grassy".
Also, those old school popcorn "whirly pop" makers are GREAT at roasting coffee.
Be sure to look online about "first crack" and "second crack" - the beans will literally start making "cracking" or "popping" noises (and jump around) once once you hit a light/medium roast and a 2nd softer crack when you hit darker roasts.
The rabbit hole goes deep so just experiment with some unroasted green coffee if you want to get started! Sweet Marias is a fantastic resource to look up!
Would love some more info on using the popcorn maker to roast your coffee beans. How interesting
Is that off-gassing why I have found fancy coffee shops to have coffee that tastes like lawn clippings? Are their beans too fresh?
Went to comment exactly this
@@sethtreydefinitely sign of underdeveloped roast. Meaning they ended the roast too quickly giving vegetal, grains/cereal, and grassy notes. You were paying for wrongly roasted coffee haha. Off gassing (c02) just helps the coffee taste less acidic (removal of carbonic acid) and clearer (clarity refers to you being able to taste the flavor profile that the coffee claims to have)
Loved the video, Kevin! I’m definitely a coffee nerd so I wanted to mention that coffee roasters will “rest” their freshly roasted coffee beans because they tend to give off mainly green and vegetal tasting notes. Seems counter-intuitive, but you really want 1-2 week old roasted coffee, to get the best flavor. That could have been why your coffee tasted so green!
That's really important to know, thank you!
True! Another purpose of resting the beans is to let them off-gas. That is, right after roasting there's tons of pent-up CO2 in the beans and if you give them some time to let those gasses escape, it'll taste better
@@zacharyreed2347 Great point! The gasses interfere with the actual brewing/extraction process, so it changes the flavor of the coffee as well.
Love this! I’ve been growing my own coffee, here in Brookings, Oregon, since 2011. We have an interesting micro-climate here. My coffee “tree” flowers almost 2-3 times a year, & has a lot of coffee fruit (coffee cherries.) right at this moment, in September. It’s in a greenhouse, with my Cardamon, Ginger, Black Pepper, & Ayahuasca vines. Cheers! ❤
That's awesome - Brookings has a great microclimate!
I'm N of you in McMinnville - and grow tea camellia, but haven't tried coffee yet!
Huh. If you can make it work that far north I wonder if I could pull it off on Vancouver Island someday.
@@teagan_p_999 im trynna grow mine in toronto, so far its turning out great. but im kinda worried about the winter that's arriving soon
I live in florence and didn’t even think to try it, I just assumed it couldn’t be done
Guess ill have to give it a “shot” (hah see what I did there)
Is your greenhouse heated?
@@dragonborn5740 hey neighbor! Love Florence! Yeah, my coffee tree is inside a greenhouse, but i only use heat in the late fall/winter months. I just use one of those portable oil radiator style heaters, with the thermostat turned to one quarter power; just to take the edge off the colder temps. The passive solar heat from the greenhouse gets crazy in the summer months, & I use an automated misting system, & a fan to regulate it. Cheers!
When I lived in the Dominican Republic my friend had coffee trees and cacao so we made coffee and chocolate. It is quite a bit of work so that was why people just bought their coffee in the colmado (local store). They have the best tasting coffee in the world (in my opinion).
I’m right there with you: love DR coffee
Jaques the goat! 🤣 This was fun! THIS is why we love Epic Gardening!
"I'm not a coffee snob." but you have two grinders, scales and a pouring kettle! Great! Fascinating experiment. Thanks for sharing this.☕
Personally, I would try to make the fruit part into a jam preserve and see what prize comes out of it. Coffee fruit jam, pair that with your coffee.
Awesome!!
I grew up in Puerto Rico and my grandpa had a small orchard, which had a few coffee shrubs. You have to let the bean dry for a few days, then roast it. Otherwise it won't taste good.
The husks are good as addendum to the soil too, just like the ground coffe once you brew it.
And "cáscara" has the accent sound on the first a. 😁
Keep up the good work! 💪🏽🥰
😂😂 I was wondering what he was saying too until I realized how he was pronouncing it
Love it!!❤😂😂😊 I would love to grow our own coffee beans!
Definitely has a "everything tastes better if you grew it yourself" vibe. ☕ Now I really want to see the peanut episode.
Agree that the popcorn air popper is great for roasting a small amount of beans. I would wait until first crack when you hear them pop to get a solid medium roast :)
sad times, one of my coffee plants was killed by my dog last year just as it flowered, with the other 2 dying in the spring from root rot as they were a few months away from maturity, all grown from beans. will have to start again, maybe with some more beans, and certainly more knowledge on growing, but since im trying to grow coffee in scotland of all places im surprised I even got that far on a first attempt.
We tried Arabica and Kentucky coffee last year. That was fun. Thank you for the kind reminder 🌿
I watched this video as I was enjoying my morning coffee. Thanks for the info, Kevin.
I've roasted some beans myself and what I found works really well is an electric popcorn maker, which uses hot air to spin/stir popcorn kernels. This gives a much better coffee roast consistency due to the heat being relatively evenly distributed. I based this on what a coffee roaster once told me; "all you need is heat and rotation."
Great idea. If I am ever forced to roast my own beans the air popcorn popper is what I will use.
Thanks for the coffee history story, and really cute cartoon going along with it❤ I just bought some coffee seeds from eden brothers, a relatively local garden place for myself here in NC. I'm excited to start growing it myself. Something about growing your very own cup of homegrown coffee just sounds GOOD! ❤
Hi I live in Jamaica and I love your channel. I get the blue mountain coffee from a farmer. think the mistake you made was that there is a chaff that is covering the beans that after you fry them in the sun they cak off. then you can roast your beans.
cheers Janice from Jamaica
I was literally just thinking about what coffee plants look like and how it all works! Perfect timing 🎉 lol
I can't wait until the day that I can have a greenhouse and be able to grow exotic plants like this. Here in Toronto I need to overwinter my plants either in my house or the garage. Currently its the garage but with the really cold weather we have I had a lot of plants die on me (Peppers mainly) so I need to find a better solution before I can branch out to something like coffee.
Hope you get more beans in the coming years and as with all gardening, harvesting and prep of the fruit it will get better over the years and more enjoyable!
I actually never heard of the fermenting. I've seen many shows including dangerous grounds and the people who pick the beans they usually wash them I thought so they do the dehusking and washing process. From there I remember seeing them do an air dry for quite a few days kind of out in the open and then sifting through to get the final bean. 🎉🎉❤
Normally coffee is "wet hulled", where the seed is extracted from the fruit and endocarp before drying and then roasting. What he did would probably be called a "honey process", with most of the fruit removed but the still wet seed is left to ferment a little bit before it fully dries and is dehulled. There's also "natural process", where the cherry is fully sun dried before dehulling, giving the seed multiple days to ferment in the fruit.
Natural process tends to give fermented fruit notes, like pineapple or strawberry. Honey process gives just a hint of those flavours.
I have arabica plant at home for about a year now. I dont drink coffee but my mum cant wait to try coffee from home. Its nice looking plant too, with the "waxed' leaves
I am so excited to see this video. I have to plants, planted in ground here in Antigua. They are approx 18 months old. I can’t wait to reach this point.
Wow! Never thought of growing coffee tree in a green house. Awesome 👏🏻
Our village (about 700m from sea level) is one of Robusta producers in Indonesia. The majority of villagers grow coffee and rice, some grow cacao and vanilla. It takes a lot of efforts and care for good harvest. June -August every year will be harvest season. We’ll get around 700-800 gr medium roasted beans for every 1000 gr green beans.
I don't know enough about coffee roasting to offer advice, but from other videos I've seen, I think that oven roasting would be your best bet(without additional equipment). It may provide that even distribution and slower roasting for drying the bean out more and giving a fuller, more even roast profile. Very interesting experiment nonetheless :)
Very cool, would be awesome to brew my own grown coffee beans!
Very cool Kevin ☕️
I love the videos like these where u are trying something for the first time! That's what's so great about gardening, u can be a mid level or master gardener even and still discover new things by growing and making something you never have before. Such a fun journey!
The nurse in me knows that we give cascara as a laxative. I had a moment of worry for you then googled it. It's comes from a different souvenir. Cascara simply means the outer layer/bark. Fun video. I love coffee but doubt it will try to grow it. We are blessed to have local roasters.
A great video that helps us give some respect to coffee making. I might have to grow one in Australia
The fact u gave a bit of background and history I find rlly lit! Great job!
The animation at the beginning was so good I had to go back and rewatch it
I cant wait to do this!
A few questions tho...
1. Did you dry the green beans after fermenting or roast straight away?
Also, I've been gifted a bag of coffee cherries that have been stored in a freezer...
1. Can I still grow a new coffee bean bush from beans that have been frozen?
2. Will freezing affect the final taste of the coffee?
❤ Kevin!! Congratulations on growing your own coffee! That has to be the best tasting coffee, the freshest you can get! All of that hard work is worth it in the end to get the freshest available. As a side note, the beans that float in the water are just sold as a lower grade coffee because they didn't mature enough to have a growth node in the center, so it's still empty and won't grow a baby coffee tree. It still tastes like a good coffee, just a lower grade. You can separate them, roast them separately, and then brew them to taste the difference. Or just roast them and save them in a jar for a later date, but taste goes down over time. Love the video, great work! ❤❤
9:51 remember, the store bought grounded coffee has additives.
Cascara is the base for "natural energy drinks" ...love it!
I've got 2 coffee plants growing right now, can't wait to see if I'm able to grow coffee someday!
Thank you so much for showing us the process of coffee from tree to cup I really enjoy it 😀😀👍👍👍
I bought c cup of coffee plants from IKEA, I transplanted them today into individual pots and I find your video, fantastic, I’m so glad I saw this because I put them into different sub😮
Columbus Ohio arabica in three years.
Never knew the cascara was used.
What I used to see is, after the cherries are peeled, the coffee is set to the sun to dry. After that you smash a bit with what's called in Spanish "a pilón" to get the grain inside. Usually that is cleaned with air, venting the slightly smashed beans.
Then after that is roasted.
PD. I'm not a coffee expert but i trying to describe what my grandpa used to do with his coffee in Puerto Rico. Yes, the process vary from place to place
I'm at 200' above sea level, so Robusta is the one I'm going to grow. Thank you for all the information! Are you going to grow more plants so you can have a full cup next time?
Please keep us updated on what you learn, this is interesting.
You have the same kettle we do! Glad to see we’re in good company
You can grow dandelion like the ones you see in your yard. Make sure to not pull from areas that get their yards sprayed with pesticides and stuff. You find it and pull it out with the root and can dehydrate/bake the root and grind it and you have natural coco/coffee or coco powder and the whole dandelion plant is edible and is very healthy/ beneficial for you as in heart, blood pressure, and etc. you can also make fried dandelion nuggets by using the heads and put in batter with your seasoning choices and fried and it’s so good. Hope y’all try and enjoy this tip.
I can imagine Kevin growing coffee on a larger scale and bartering it during the next apocalypse challenge.
I have 4 little coffee plants but they haven’t fruited yet. I’m learning all about roasting in your comments section though, so I’ll be ready. Thanks! 😊
Another epic experiment! ❤ I tried sprouting coffee seeds as well, but failed miserably… but after this vid I’m dedicated for some homegrown bean tea!
Me too! I couldn't get any of them to spout 😢. I used the plastic bag and wet paper towel method.
Artisanal coffee is usually picked when ripe. Cheaper mass produced coffee is picked all at once a couple times of year. Typically, the mucielage around the beans is fermented, sometimes skin on, mostly skin off.
Absolutely cool, Kevin. Enjoy!
Great storytelling and great garden growing ideas.
Oddly I before watching this video I watched a video of 18th century reenactors that focused on food and cooking in the 1700's. One of these reenactors Owen a coffee company. In this coffee episode they say nothing about soaking the beans in water but they do talk about drying the beans. They also roast the beans very dark and talk about the beans cracking two times during the roast and that is how the hull is removed. Short answer: dry don't soak, roast very dark until the beans cracking twice, this removes the hull
Adoro tomar café.
Parabéns pelo vídeo.
Muito interessante e explicativo.🇧🇷
One of our new graduate students here at San Diego State runs his own small batch coffee roaster. It's called Catalytic Coffee run by a guy named Joe. Maybe you can reach out and see if he has tips on home roasting!
I grow coffee here in San Luis Obispo, California. Mine is a dwarf type tree about 5 feet tall and does quite well growing in a pot underneath a tree fern. It's strictly a novelty but fun to grow.
I picked some coffee cherries off a random coffee bush on my walk, did the whole fermentation process and then roasting process. I did a light roast and oh my god it smelt amazing. I put the roasted beans in a little jar but then i forgot where i put it by the time i ordered a grinder 😢
I just love watching you enjoy the fruits of your labor, literally lol even if it's just a tiny bit, just remember, YOU did that ❤
I need a coffee plant now.
Reminds me of Philippines I grow up Surrounded with Cacao and Coffee farm ❤❤❤
The more you grow the more you know! After watching I realize I love green Matcha tea so this might be a win win! Ultimately, growing a Matcha tea leaf plant might prove wonderful for me! Ever thought to grow tea plants to harvest the leaves
...Ceremonial Grade Matcha Tea perhaps? That would be right down my alley for sure! Love your videos & keep up the hard work both physically, creatively and mentally!
That would be fascinating!
Amen coffee growers have my respect...alot if work
Something that I'd love to dabble with someday. Love your content!!
Love the used coffee filter on the arbor. LOL My little coffee trees are about 9" tall. 🙂
I love your videos man. Nice relaxed style, great to see some experimenting. Your channel has been a big inspiration to change from lawn to fruits, vegetables and insect friendly plants :D
Pulling a leek out of the garden for my morning eggs is bliss.
Very informative and amusing. Thanks for the wholesome content. Makes my day.
This is one of those “Finally Did It!” moments. Well done as always Kevin.
I could be wrong, I heard you need to allow the beans to rest for about two days after roasting? not sure. Definitely going to grab myself two trees, I'm in crazy south africa arabica grows well.
You have me convinced. I am going to ask the wife to go and buy several more bags of organic coffee at the co-op and put them in the freezer. I don't care what it costs because I ain't growing and processing my own. When we can't get it anymore and I run out I will have to switch to wine and brandy. I know how to make that myself and it sure takes a lot less work than taking care of that finicky plant and processing the coffee.
After watching this video, I forever will think of Jacques as having the body of a goat with blood shoot eyes munching on coffee plants. That is his true form.
So neat to see the process. I must say I was getting distracted by Pucci in the background 🤩 it's looking so good!
i love your planting videos man,keep it up
We don't ferment the coffee beans. We pick them let them out to dry a couple of days. We roast them with cáscara on an open fire. We then vent it to get rid of the shaft. At that point you can lightly roast again if you want to. Then we grind and enjoy.
Super amazing!! 🎉😄
The origin story you made the fun video of starring Kevin the Goatherd and Jacques the Goat has been attributed to both the origins of coffee and qat.... Ethiopia and Yemen both star in both origin stories, but who knows where coffee and qat started first? We'll probably never know for sure, but thanks to those goats and goatherds for showing us the magic mocha. (Mocha comes from the Yemeni port city of Makha, where Yemen's cash crop was exported hundreds of years ago...)
Grats on your own coffee.
I'm from Germany, had a coffee plant twice, but both died within 2 or 3 years without ever making a single flower.
I'm happy for your great achievement with this. So awesome for your growth with this coffee plant.❤❤❤
Nicely done! Really enjoyed this one. ❤
Thank you for this! I have been considering doing this for some time. You have convinced me, I LOVE coffee
This was awesome. You guys crack me up. Yay for coffee ☕
In Georgia you making me wanna try to grow it
Growing coffee is a thing of its own, especially in a colder climate
After some research i found that tea bushes may survive the winters here though so that would be a great thing too
Watching this while brewing my morning coffee
Please don’t go for dark roast with your coffee unless it’s not a great harvest quality wise. A light roast will let you taste the unique flavors of your plant more. Whole sale coffee is generally dark roast because it’s not from a single source so it mashes the flavors together. If you go through the effort, taste all the benefits.
Hey there. What you did was a washed process coffee. You really want to dry them first before roasting or the center will not develop (roast) during roasting due to high moisture content. Also, you need to hear cracking (first crack) before you stop roasting. You’re gonna have underdeveloped coffee if you stop too early
Not that I really know what I’m talking about, but when we went on a coffee tour on Hawaii island they dried their coffee beans flat in the open air for a few days before roasting them, turning them every few hours with a rake. They had it timed out perfectly because if it went even a little too long I guess they were ruined!
the nomadic movement youtubers started a coffee business the morning movement and you have to try it!!!! Roastery in Stowe, VA and just an epic story and channel. The tossing of the bag, you are truly epic!
Thanks for this video! Very interesting and informative. I enjoyed watching this. HAPPY GARDENING
as a barista this is on my bucket list, im in Ireland so ill have to put in a lot of work, but wow would it be a dream
Love and respect from Ethiopia Africa.
This is the best video ever. I love the editing.
This is really amazing! Well done! 🥰
This is so cool! I'd definitely love to grow my own coffee! 😍☕
Nicely done!
Let's do that again in 3 years! 😆
Sweet! I have a small coffee plant, it’s doing good
You keep getting more and more creative! Love it. Will have to grow my own someday ☕️
Bravo Kevin. 👏
Thank you for acknowledging the apocryphal nature of the story of the origin of coffee. The real story is much more interesting then that often told story. The podcast “empire” did a great episode on it if you are interested.
I don't think I have the patience to wait for coffee to grow, but I would love to grow tea. I don't consume as much tea and I hear it's pretty easy to grow.
I'm growing a coffee plant this year. I'm excited to see buds form!
P.S great editing epic team!
Great viddy! ❤ Good on ya fer givin' it a go. Look forward to next attempt! Love yer channel and appreciate yer wisdoms
coffee have similiar way of taste like wine, a terroir in wine also happen in coffee, in tropical region, we grow in under bit of shade, not on direct sunlight, it berry will rippen faster if hit by direct sunlight, not so good aroma from underipe seeds. soil also play key role in specific region taste
Awesome I was just looking at one online.🎉
We have a coffee plant in San Diego in either 10a or 10b (haven’t checked the new charts) but it’s never seen a green house and is flourishing. If you want to see a picture of it or see it in person let me know. I have. A funny feeling we live within a few miles of you (based on all the queen palms in the backdrop of your videos). I have no idea how to instant message or otherwise so getting ahold of each other ought to be intersting