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All
coffee is grown between the Tropic of Cancer
and the Tropic of Capricorn. These names
represent two imaginary "lines" that circle our globe approximately
23 degrees north and south of the equator. Here
in the "middle of the world",
the climate is warm and humid - necessary conditions for growing
the sensitive coffee plant.
Although
there are more than 60 varieties of coffee that grow in the world,
only two are commercially cultivated. These are Arabica and Robusta.
Arabica
coffee is a higher quality coffee. It is naturally lower in caffeine
than Robusta and grows at elevations of 3000 to 6000 feet and above,
where frost is rare. The Arabica tree is not as hardy as the Robusta,
and a single Arabica tree typically yields only 1 - 1 ½ pounds of
green coffee beans per season. Gourmet
coffee companies purchase the highest grades of Arabica beans.
Robusta
coffee plants are more resistant to disease and drought than the
Arabica and are grown from sea level up to 2000 feet. Robusta
trees yield twice as many beans per tree per season, but produce
a coffee that is of lower quality. Most
Robusta beans are blended with Arabica coffees and used by large
commercial coffee companies for canned and instant coffees.
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