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Punaweb Forum
Coffee - Printable Version

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+--- Thread: Coffee (/showthread.php?tid=4063)

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RE: Coffee - Devany - 01-09-2010

That might be a cool one to try. Have any more info on him?

Aloha au i Hawai`i,
devany

www.myhawaiianhome.blogspot.com
www.eastbaypotters.blogspot.com



RE: Coffee - Kapohocat - 01-11-2010

Rick is his name and I will try to find a number for him for you.

I typically do not like the Kona coffee beans in the french roast. The Kona beans do not typically hold up well to french roast or "over roast". They are too bitter IMHO.

I drank Tom Sharkey's coffee for years and it is pretty good in the medium roasts.


RE: Coffee - mikewj - 01-12-2010

I was watching Good Eats (Alton Brown) recently. He was making Cafe Presse, and added a pinch of salt to the ground beans 'to reduce the bitterness'. Check it out?


RE: Coffee - Kapohocat - 01-12-2010

OH! I love watching Alton!

Rick Turpen's coffee (coffee from the same plant as the Jamaican Blue Mountain peaberry beans)

turpen@hawaiiantel.net $20 1/2 lb.

He doesn't have a website and it is best to email him as he has a hearing disability.




RE: Coffee - handsoff - 01-15-2010

Hello from Geneva Switzerland

I found this article which may be of some interest:
http://travel.nytimes.com/2010/01/15/travel/escapes/15hawaii.html

BTW, does anyone know if you can farm on a lot in HPP?

TIA
Marshall


RE: Coffee - Kelena - 01-15-2010

If I had my way, you would HAVE to farm on a lot in HPP. But you can, yes. It is zoned agricultural.


RE: Coffee - oink - 01-15-2010

Bearing in mind that most HPP lots are solid rock so you will have to create soil where you want to plant.

Pua`a
S. FL
Big Islander to be.


RE: Coffee - Kapohocat - 01-15-2010

quote:
Originally posted by Glen

If I had my way, you would HAVE to farm on a lot in HPP. But you can, yes. It is zoned agricultural.


As long as you aren't farming patchouli! [Big Grin][:p][Big Grin]


RE: Coffee - Devany - 01-19-2010

Kat... you are an instigator aren't you? <ggg>

Aloha au i Hawai`i,
devany

www.myhawaiianhome.blogspot.com
www.eastbaypotters.blogspot.com



RE: Coffee - rbrgs - 01-20-2010

A century ago, there was a lot of coffee grown in upper Puna. I found some old trees in the forest that were still hanging on, and even found a few trees small enough to transplant. I'm now planting seedlings from those trees as an understory in the Ohia forest (after hand clearing the waiawi); so far, so good. This is at 1900' in Glenwood, and in dirt, not rock.

One of the trees I found has yellow berries.