Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Fire!!

It's over now but that was about tooooo much excitement for me. Ron was finally taking some time to relax between drying and raking coffee. He was looking towards the ocean for whales when smoke arose from the fields below. He yelled at me that he was taking the Gator down for a look. When he phoned me back we decided a 911 call to the fire department was next. There are houses down there but you enter from another road about 1/4 mile down and I was having a hard time explaining to dispatch how to get there so I met the fire truck at the corner and directed them. Meanwhile Ron was cutting the water line to the irrigation to get buckets down there. A few pickers were around and they help tote water. Another neighbor helped the fire trucks navigate to the location as Ron said it was right behind a new house built there a few years ago and could be imminent danger to them.

Endless water is availble if you can get to it and that's when the helicopter arrived. The first fire truck was running short on water and a second had arrived so it looked pretty well under control but with many hot spots. The helicopter headed towards the ocean dipped an extremely large vessel in the ocean and headed back. With a sploosh it opened and dropped it's load over the first hot spot. After several trips our air fire force had the job done.

I'm sure I'll read about the theories in the paper tomorrow. We have some ideas but will hold our speculation until after the investigation. The fire didn't start on our property but near it. We lost 60 coffee trees or so but feel it could have been a lot worse if Ron had not taken a break to look for those whales. And NO (don't anyone ask) that is not how we usually get roasted coffee!

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Mele Kalikimaka me ka Hau'oli Makahiki Hou!

.....that's Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year! From our farm to you and thanks for making our season bright!

We are still picking coffee. After the good rain the other day we have some our crop ripening again. We lost quite a bit from the drought this fall. No rain for 2 months does not do well for the coffee trees nor the beans.

Coffee is all packaged as we finally managed to get all the Christmas orders out. Since many requested ground coffee we were able to find a used commercial grinder for sale. We purchasd it last week and will now be able to provide ground coffee much faster and fresher. And best of all it will be easier for me to package. Another positive is that it has several grind levels and you will be able to request the grind you like all the way from espresso to press pot.

Honu Kai B&B, one of the local bed and breakfasts that serves our coffee orders 5# at a time. I am happy to annouce that we will be offering these 5# bags on our website after the new year. For a limited time we will offer them @ $112.00 and that includes free shipping.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Our 2008-09 crop is sold out!

We have been feverishly working on the 2009-10 crop lately. Just as last years crop, this years has been pulped, washed and dried into parchment. The beautiful color of the dried parchment is a tawny to golden and the beans quietly rest in our humidity controlled grainpro bags. July was our first pick, so that is the parchment we will begin using for our green bean as we prepare to roast. Three to four months is just the right amount of time for the parchment to age to a point that produces the intense flavors of our roasted coffees. So with a clang and shuffle we are now onto producing more of your favorite smooth and rich coffees. And the circle goes on because after the rain last week we saw some stray coffee blossoms here and there. We see picking in our future called the 2010-11 crop.

Friday, October 30, 2009

Heads up on last day to Christmas shop

We roast our coffee on an as need basis so you can receive your coffee freshly packaged right after roasting. To serve our all our customers we need to have all our orders by DECEMBER 12, 2009 in order to get them roasted, packaged and shipped to your door in time for Christmas. Please keep this date in mind. Eventhough the coffee bags we use are mylar with a oneway valve and do keep the coffee fresh for 3 months plus, our goal is to get that coffee to you as soon after packaging as possible. Our Holiday orders are coming in now. Count how many on your gift list you can fill by just one order of freshly roasted Kona Lisa Coffee. Remember to get the order in no later than DECEMBER 12, 2009.

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Couldn't have said it better myself

Found this in the NG Drving Guides to America, California And Nevada and Hawaii edition page 154.
"Only one state in the U.S. grows Coffee--Hawaii--and the best comes from the Kona district of the Big Island. In fact, conoisseurs rank this arabica coffee among the world's top brews. A missionary planted the first trees in Kona around 1828. The growing conditions were perfect--rich volcanic soil, an elevation above 1,200 feet, cool breezes, light rains. In springtime, slopes are blanketed with white blossoms, aptly named Kona Snow. Between September and January, field workers harvest cherry red berries. Coffee's valuable part is the seed--the coffee bean. Each year, a tree produces only enough beans to make a single pound of roasted coffee. But brewed up, that coffee is as pure and intoxicating as sunshine."

Friday, August 14, 2009

Alex

Alex is our dry miller. He takes our beans from the parchment stage to green for us just before the roasting process. Last week Alex gave us, we felt, the greatest compliment on our coffee. After milling the parchment he ran his hands through the green bean and scooped up several handfuls of the beans. He said "this is what good coffee is. Your coffee is a very vibrant green, all one color and very hard. This will roast exceptionally well with no broken beans or off color beans. All this makes for a very fresh, tingly, and tasty cup of coffee." Ron needed this encouragement as this season is coming in slow and he is spending a lot of time sorting through the beans as they dry. He picks out all dark or discolored beans and throws them out. We sort again the next day and remove any white or hollow beans. We are glad to report that what we call, self quality control, pays off. This is what makes our coffee just one step above. Also the coffee Alex is speaking to is last years crop. It takes that long to let the flavors partake of the richness in each bean. Lastly, but not unimportant, is the storage process. Alex says as long as we store the coffee/parchment properly and keep the humidity low and even it's better to age. That is what we try to do,and our coffee according to Alex is remarkable because of it. To be clear, storing parchment is what we do, not green. Green bean has a much shorter flavor span and needs to be roasted in a reasonable amount of time. We keep no coffee green. We take it to a roast the same day it is milled which is our commitment to bring the most flavorful Kona coffee to our customers.

Friday, July 24, 2009

Picking Season

Picking season has begun. We have bright crimson cherry and have picked over 1000 lbs. this week. The trees seem to have beans in multiple various stages of ripening so it looks like a long picking season this year. This probably doesn't mean a bumper crop it just means the beans will ripen in smaller stages. Last year we had a terrific winter blossom one day in February and thus had the fruit ripening in a shorter period of time. This year we had more blossoms at many different times. In fact the other day we had trees with ripe cherry, green cherry, little buds going into bean and a blossom all on one tree. We thought what has mother nature come up with this season. But then this year we had more rain in the winter. We called it our rainy, dry season. Coffee loves rain and likes to blossom after a nice winter rain. So here we are with possibly 145 pounds of roasted coffee because as you know it takes 7 pounds of cherry to produce 1 pound of delicious Kona coffee.

Monday, June 1, 2009

Irrigation

This years weather can be describe as, "we had a wet, dry season and now we are on to the dry, wet season." In Kona the dry season is our beautiful months of fall thru winter. We had ample rains thru this season this year. Now we are into Kona's wetter season, supposedly. This is why Kona coffee has grown so well here for over a hundred years. All the rest of the state and it's islands has wet winters and drier sunny summers. The Kona area has the opposite with beautiful sunny winters and wetter spring and summers to enable the coffee to grow juicy and plump and ripen. So far this spring, no rain. Oh, it sprinkles some now and then but we seem to be nearing drought conditions. A couple times this week and again today Ron ran our irrigation. I'm not sure how many zones we have, it's at least 5, so Ron was on a schedule from one part of the farm to the other, twisting and turning valves and giving those luscious beans their drink of water. The trees and the beans look great and are a bright shiny green now. The rains will come, July and August was very rainy last year, so I'm looking forward to that. But right now we will continue to irrigate as we saw one or two lonely little beans turn red the other day. It won't be long.

Sunday, May 10, 2009

Juicy rich coffee beans






These beans or cherry as we call them are about 3 months from ripe. They need to become the lovely red full flavored cherry before we snatch them. Just wanted you to know how well they are progressing.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

That perfect cup of coffee

Kona is where you will find that perfect cup of coffee. All of Kona Lisa's coffee is picked by hand. Even some of the coffee is picked by Ron. Here I'll fill you in on what goes on at the farm as we are preparing the 'cherry' for it's journey to your cup. Cherry is what the coffee fruit containing the bean is called when it is still on the trees. So we pick 'cherry' and only red cherry. Coffee ripens slowly and unevenly on the tree therefore we must pick the same tree several times during picking season. Picking season, by the way, is roughly from Aug-Nov each year at our farm. To keep that cup of coffee light, fruity and chocolaty you need to process that cherry the same day it's picked. We do not let it sit overnight before pulping, so during picking season dinner waits. We pulp that lovely red skin off and let the bean ferment in water overnight. The cherry pulp makes good fertilizer too. Next morning Ron checks the fermenting tank to make sure the fermenting process has completed. He rubs the bean making sure the slimy, sugaring coating is dissolving, then the beans get thoroughly rinsed and spread out on our drying deck. The first day we rake those beans hourly and then daily for the next seven days. This also the time we get down on our hands and knees and pick out and discard any bean that even looks like it should not be in a perfect cup of coffee. At this point your coffee only smells like fresh grain. With good sunshine, yes your cup of coffee is sun dried, Ron will bring his grain meter out to check the moisture content of those dried beans, which are now called parchment. They are called parchment because they are like a peanut with a protective light coating or shell on them. If they have reached the optimum dryness for storing gourmet coffee, about 11%, we pick them up and load them into humidity controlled grain bags for storage. This is the point where your cup of coffee relaxes, smooths it flavor out and waits for you. Kona Lisa does not take her beans to green until then. When you order or we take our coffee up to the Saturday Keauhou market is when parchment gets milled to green and roasted. Our goal is to bring you one of the freshest cups of coffee available and it takes seven pounds of picked cherry to produce one pound of fresh roasted coffee for that perfect cup. That's how we do it and we wouldn't do it any other way.

Monday, April 20, 2009

Your coffee is brewing!


Here's what next falls cup of coffee is lookin' like. We've have ample rains, the beans are maturing nicely, still green. They are not ahead or behind schedule, just right! These beans will need to ripen to yellow, blush, then red before they are picked but I am already yearning for the wonderful flavors they will produce.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

The season progresses

What I mean is that coffee blossoms are abundant today. After a good few days of rain last week we were expecting this. Perhaps it'll be biggest plantation blossom of the year. Oh, we have had several sporadic blossoms in various parts of the field but this one is the largest so far. The gauge is that coffee cherry will ripen in 210 days after a blossom. This is give or take a week or so on either side depending on spring/summer weather conditions. We had a few very early blossoms from Nov-Jan so picking will start slow near the end of July but it looks like our heaviest picking will be in October this year, much later than has been recorded for this farm in recent years. In fact in the 2005 season they had a very early pick and had new season parchment ready in August.

We had a good season last year and dried all our cherry. This is contrary to this farms practices from earlier years. They sold quite a bit of cherry. So we now believe we have enough parchment to continue with our green bean supply until the new season comes in this year. Having green bean available to our customers means that we'll be able to roast fresh Kona coffee for our customers weekly for our market and on demand for our internet customers. For that we are greatful and for todays blossom we are also greatful. Always feel free to contact us at www.konalisacoffee.com for updates.

Monday, March 9, 2009

 
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This years crop

We have beans ripening already for this summers crop. If you visit be sure to email us at konalisacoffee@yahoo.com for an update.