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Coffee Tour at the Bay View Farm

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You might be saying — “Joy, it’s Christmas. Why are you talking about coffee tours?”

Well, friends, if you’re looking out the window and you can see this –

[Note: That sound at the end is not my breathing, it was the gush of wind!]

Wouldn’t you rather be thinking of sunshine, Hawaii and something warm — like coffee? I’ve been so busy here with all the Christmas shopping, work (which, trust me, tends to get really hectic before Christmas…why, whyyyy?), and trying to plan for the Christmas week ahead. I only even got our Christmas menu down pat last night! Now that I looked at the calendar and saw 21, I am starting to panic. Dan is coming here soon, and since then, we are going to be crazy busy with parties, food, and squeezing in time to do some tourist-y things. I’m severely nervous of how everything is going to turn out. I’m an OCD wreck like that!

I can’t leave you all behind though, not after the sudden-hiatus debacle of Fall 2008 when we seemed like we fell off the face of the earth. No, no, I promise. I’ve been cooking and baking a lot, and I even made sugar cookies to satisfy the sweet Christmas tooth. But I see everything Christmas-y in the food blogging world already and I am sure you will find great recipes among our food blogging friends. I will get to writing about cream puffs before Christmas, I hope. Because, that’s a super awesome treat which my mom used to make (she needs to get her baking mojo back!!! Hello, calling mom.).

Ok, for now…where were we? COFFEE! Oh, not just coffee, but Kona coffee.

Last October Dan and I visited the Bay View Farm coffee farm in Honaunau, HI. It was a really hot and bright day as you will notice in the photos below, but we braved it. And Dan The Tea Drinker and Non-Coffee Drinker enjoyed it. Hehe.

We were greeted by a really nice fellow who also happens to be a musician. Them talented people. Anyway, so he took us around the area and facilities for a better understanding of this beloved coffee that has wowed coffee lovers from all over.

It all begins with this, the hand-picked coffee cherries:

And for the curious, this is what a coffee plant (tree?) looks like, looking so lush and happy (hard not be if you live in Hawaii):

Their Kona coffee cherries are harvested from different small local farms. It is locally owned and operated.  Farmers leave their harvest here:

We witnessed the guy who dropped off these two sacks, as our tour guide nodded to him. Everybody knows everybody. There’s nothing here that resembles a big manufacturer or factory:

At the end of the day after all the cherries have been delivered, it will go through chute for a soaking process called wet milling.

The beans will be separated from the coffee cherry pulp.

The husks that have been separated are sent here right outside the building:

They are later taken back to the fields to be used as a fertilizer. The wet-milled, soaked green coffee beans are then brought to this drying deck for sun-drying. They are raked every hour for a week for them to fully dry. A week!

Once dry, they bring the beans to the next processing facility where the green beans are removed from the parchment [manly hands courtesy of Dan]:

The coffee beans are then sorted according to size, weight, and defects. Apparently, those with defects are sent to those who make “Kona coffee blend”. The primary Kona coffee grades are the Peaberry, Extra Fancy, Fancy, #1, and Prime.

After all that long process these sorted beans are packed for inspection, and sale or roasting at the farm’s own facilities:

And that’s the tour! Thereafter we enjoyed our own cups of coffee and bought bags to take home.

I hope you enjoyed this coffee tour via Gourmeted. Have a cup of hot coffee this afternoon and relax in the midst of the busy holiday week. Now I have to go back to reality and do some chores. :-) Aloha!

14 Responses to “Coffee Tour at the Bay View Farm”

  1. Saeco says:

    Thanks for the picture tour. Its great to see these co-operative styles of business still surviving in these crazy times.

    I bet the coffee tastes even sweeter when you have tramped throughout the fields where it is grown.

  2. liz says:

    wonderful post! thank you for sharing.

  3. joy says:

    Saeco — You’re welcome. I’m glad to see these businesses survive, too. In places like that, the whole community support each other.

    Liz — You’re welcome, hun. It’s fun to share things like these. :)

  4. Ben says:

    It is so cold here that the pipes are starting to freeze, but I wouldn’t change it for anything. Especially this week :-p

    Happy Holidays my friend!

    Bens last blog post..Pork chops with spicy guava sauce

  5. Thank you for the article. As coffee lovers we are heading to Hawaii in the early new year and I will definitely be making a stop here.

  6. Wonderful picture series, it’s a pity we do live a long long long way from search a warm place. Especially no in the winter time….

    Morten Pedersens last blog post..Merry Christmas.

  7. Gera says:

    Hi Joy!

    Wonderful coffee tour with exceptional photos! For a coffeeholic like me and stay in Hawaii is really the paradise :)

    Happy Holidays for you!!

    Gera .:. sweetsfoods

    Geras last blog post..Turron Torrone Nougat – Tempting Confectioneries You Should Enjoy!

  8. joy says:

    Ben — I must admit that it really FEELS like Christmas with this kind of weather. Bring on the hot chocolate and warm blankies. :) Happy Holidays to you, too!

    Office Coffee — Definitely do that. You will enjoy it!

    Morten — Thank you! It’s nice in Hawaii, but I do love having four seasons. :)

    Gera — Thanks so much. Coffee there is definitely a must-drink. Food is great, too! Actually…everything is good. Even the people are so nice. Happy holidays to you as well!

  9. Nate says:

    Great post. I could go for a cup of Kona coffee right about now…or should I say, I could go for a cup of coffee in Kona!

    Nates last blog post..Merry Christmas from House of Annie

  10. Nate says:

    By the way, what theme are you using? it’s very nice.

    Nates last blog post..Pandan Chiffon Cake

  11. Neil says:

    It’s always nice to see the backstory into products, and especially being able to see the plantation you buy the beans from!

    Neils last blog post..Yorkshire Lamb Chops

    • joy says:

      Absolutely, Neil. It gave me a better sense of how much work was put into the product, plus I like meeting the people who make my coffee. :)

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