- Видео 147
- Просмотров 139 334
Kona Earth - 100% Kona Coffee
США
Добавлен 26 сен 2021
Taste the Aloha with our 100% Kona Coffee! Single-estate grown and lovingly nurtured crop to cup on our family farm, we micro-roast on-site and ship farm-direct for supreme freshness. (No glyphosate, aka Roundup, is used in our products.) Don't miss our gift bundles, mugs, hats, t-shirts, Kona chocolates, Kona coffee meat rub, coffee scrubs, soaps, and more.
Our Farm: Located on the tropical slopes of the Hualalai volcano, the high mountain “mauka” climate allows our coffee trees to grow lush. The coffee ripens slowly which allows the beans to reach remarkable size and quality. We grow, roast, and then ship freshly roasted whole beans directly from the farm.
We Give Back: Through our Care In Every Cup program, a percentage of proceeds from every Kona Earth purchase supports our local non-profit partners. Great coffee for a great cause!
Wholesale/bulk pricing is available on request. VIP Farm Tours by appointment.
Our Farm: Located on the tropical slopes of the Hualalai volcano, the high mountain “mauka” climate allows our coffee trees to grow lush. The coffee ripens slowly which allows the beans to reach remarkable size and quality. We grow, roast, and then ship freshly roasted whole beans directly from the farm.
We Give Back: Through our Care In Every Cup program, a percentage of proceeds from every Kona Earth purchase supports our local non-profit partners. Great coffee for a great cause!
Wholesale/bulk pricing is available on request. VIP Farm Tours by appointment.
Comparing Different Kona Coffee Roasts Like a Pro!
Our Kona Classic is 100% Kona whole bean from Hawaii. Our Coffee Talk host Luke Walstead does a cupping to differentiate the tasting notes of the different roast profiles. The Kona coffee sampler is a great way to try all three.
ABOUT KONA EARTH: Husband-and-wife team Steve and Joanie Wynn lovingly nurture their 100% Kona coffee from crop to cup, processing on-site, micro-batch roasting to order, and shipping right from the farm for supreme freshness. Prized for its rich flavor and low acidity, Kona coffee is favored by coffee aficionados around the world.
ABOUT THE FARM: Nestled on the tropical slopes of the Hualalai volcano on Hawaii’s Big Island, Kona Earth’s farm grows exceptional 100...
ABOUT KONA EARTH: Husband-and-wife team Steve and Joanie Wynn lovingly nurture their 100% Kona coffee from crop to cup, processing on-site, micro-batch roasting to order, and shipping right from the farm for supreme freshness. Prized for its rich flavor and low acidity, Kona coffee is favored by coffee aficionados around the world.
ABOUT THE FARM: Nestled on the tropical slopes of the Hualalai volcano on Hawaii’s Big Island, Kona Earth’s farm grows exceptional 100...
Просмотров: 45
Видео
Is Premium Kona Coffee Worth The Money?
Просмотров 56014 дней назад
Is Kona coffee too expensive? How does it compare to other specialty coffees or buying coffee from a coffee shop? In this video Luke breaks down the per-serving cost of 100% Kona coffee and the results might surprise you! Intro 00:00 Focus of the Video 01:00 Coffee Pods/Capsules 02:13 Methodology/Serving size 03:10 Kona Earth Coffee Pricing 03:57 Pricing Other Specialty Coffees 04:48 Pricing No...
Kona Coffee Harvesting: Handpicking is the Secret
Просмотров 14221 день назад
Kona coffee is meticulously handpicked so that only the ripest cherries are harvested. Go behind-the-scenes at Kona Earth's farm to learn about this critical component of coffee harvesting. ABOUT KONA EARTH: Husband-and-wife team Steve and Joanie Wynn lovingly nurture their 100% Kona coffee from crop to cup, processing on-site, micro-batch roasting to order, and shipping right from the farm for...
PERFECT Coffee in 2024? It's All About the RIGHT Roast
Просмотров 216Месяц назад
Ever wonder how and why coffee roasting professionals decide how dark to roast coffee? Join Luke as he explores the reasons behind one of the most misunderstood elements of coffee production. Intro 00:00 Focus of the video 01:11 4 Main Reasons 01:46 Specialty Coffee Culture 02:56 Choosing the Right Roast 03:15 Variety 04:13 Climate 06:59 Quality 08:40 Tasting 10:13 Shopping for Coffee 12:45 DIS...
Where Does Coffee Come From? || Coffee Talk Ep.12
Просмотров 196Месяц назад
Where Does Coffee Come From? || Coffee Talk Ep.12
Coffee and chocolate gifts from Kona Earth
Просмотров 29Месяц назад
Coffee and chocolate gifts from Kona Earth
COFFEE LOVERS Rejoice! Gift Guide for the ULTIMATE Coffee Enthusiast
Просмотров 2202 месяца назад
COFFEE LOVERS Rejoice! Gift Guide for the ULTIMATE Coffee Enthusiast
Kona Earth's Surprising Trick to ELEVATE Your Irish Coffee Game
Просмотров 602 месяца назад
Kona Earth's Surprising Trick to ELEVATE Your Irish Coffee Game
Best Coffee Cocktails - A Deliciously Tipsy Guide || Coffee Talk Epi.10
Просмотров 2652 месяца назад
Best Coffee Cocktails - A Deliciously Tipsy Guide || Coffee Talk Epi.10
What is the best coffee in the world? || Coffee Talk Ep.9
Просмотров 2883 месяца назад
What is the best coffee in the world? || Coffee Talk Ep.9
Best Travel Coffee Maker (V60 pour over) || Coffee Talk Ep.8
Просмотров 6833 месяца назад
Best Travel Coffee Maker (V60 pour over) || Coffee Talk Ep.8
How to Brew Great Coffee for a Crowd || Coffee Talk Ep.7
Просмотров 4014 месяца назад
How to Brew Great Coffee for a Crowd || Coffee Talk Ep.7
Make Espresso at Home Without the Fancy Machine
Просмотров 2,3 тыс.4 месяца назад
Make Espresso at Home Without the Fancy Machine
Expert Tips for Choosing the Best Coffee Grinder || Coffee Talk Ep.5
Просмотров 10 тыс.5 месяцев назад
Expert Tips for Choosing the Best Coffee Grinder || Coffee Talk Ep.5
Coffee Showdown: Iced Coffee vs. Cold Brew || Coffee Talk Ep.4
Просмотров 8 тыс.5 месяцев назад
Coffee Showdown: Iced Coffee vs. Cold Brew || Coffee Talk Ep.4
The Art (and Science) of Freshly Ground Coffee
Просмотров 1005 месяцев назад
The Art (and Science) of Freshly Ground Coffee
How to Measure Coffee: Scoop vs Scale || Coffee Talk
Просмотров 8446 месяцев назад
How to Measure Coffee: Scoop vs Scale || Coffee Talk
Make Better Coffee at Home (Pour Over Tutorial) || Coffee Talk Ep. 2
Просмотров 1,8 тыс.6 месяцев назад
Make Better Coffee at Home (Pour Over Tutorial) || Coffee Talk Ep. 2
3 Top Ways to Brew Your Coffee At Home(French Press vs Pour Over vs AeroPress) || Coffee Talk E
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.7 месяцев назад
3 Top Ways to Brew Your Coffee At Home(French Press vs Pour Over vs AeroPress) || Coffee Talk E
Discover Kona Earth: Dive Into The Farm And Meet The Team!
Просмотров 1067 месяцев назад
Discover Kona Earth: Dive Into The Farm And Meet The Team!
Small-Batch Roasting Delivers Big Advantages
Просмотров 13Год назад
Small-Batch Roasting Delivers Big Advantages
Is there a reason you didn't use an espresso shot for the iced coffee? That would eliminate the filter issue and you'd get all those coffee bean oils in the shot
But there is lots of cafee bars, which are diong your cofee using capsules like dolce gusto or nescafe and they will not tell you . I am buyng Milano Dolce gusto capsules and for the 10% of xofee price at the bar this is.vety good cofee. Setimes even at regular bar with big cofee press machine I will get hortoble cofee. 😂
speaking from experience many/most coffee aficionados living in hawaii where kona is from, do not favor it. indo, south america and especially african beans are significantly better. everything in hawaii in general costs more then the marketing of kona and trying to convince people it is very special raises the price. typically majority of in the know coffee consumers choose non kona even at hawaii costco that has in house roaster. most of "living in hawaii" coffee aficionados see kona as overhyped "for tourists" coffee.
Costco was sued for selling counterfeit Kona coffee, so that is not a barometer of "real" Kona coffee. Kona coffee is world renowned for a reason - it is some of the finest coffee on the planet - marketing or not. If you haven't tried the real deal - farm direct Kona coffee from a reputable farm - you haven't experienced it at all.
@@KonaEarthCoffee i referred to hawaii costco stores that do indeed stock and sell bonafide coffee direct from bonafide kona farms. (lived there for many years) hawaii already had laws in place to protect kona. lawsuit was directed at us mainland (non hawaii) costco stores as well as others you mentioned. i did try some authentic kona coffee living in hawaii and i did not like bitterness or some may call it "bite". another marketing overhyped coffee is civet coffee which i also do not care for. typically the most sought after by specialty coffee aficionados and highly regarded beans are not kona but from various boutique farms in central and south america as well as kenya, ethiopia, tanzania.
@@silasketgaskets8709 whatever coffee you love is "the best". For our customers, that's Kona. Definitely not bitter...our beans are known for being smooth and chocolatey with low acid.
Depende da kona... 😂😂😂
So true!
Why do we keep to pick coffee cherry when labour is too expensive today .we should use at least herge trimer we cut all the branches carrying the cherry and leave all these branches about 2 or 4 note of leaves ( for making a shoots to have the fruit next season ) keep doing like that in every harvest season we save a lot labours and got more coffee production .the branch with cherry on it , we bring into machine to seperate it . This methode call refresh one year old of branch on coffee tree ( your methode is refresh trunk on coffee tree )
If I were you I would pruning different method . I would cut on the all branch which just were harvested for 2 or 4 note ( leaves note ) that means we cut all branch have 1 years old on the coffee tree and keep the branch long 2 or 4 note of leaves . Then these cutted branch will have the shoots .we keep 1 or 2 strong shoot for fruit on next season .. Remember the branch at one year old is the best the branch to give good shoot for fruit , but we have to cut the all the branch 1 year old same time .,do not cut few of them , This method is better than your methods coffee. cutting . This will provide for coffee tree main branch bigger to a void falling down , provide more the sun for coffee tree , good to control pest manegerment ,stable production every year for coffee growing , applying in mechanical pruning better for big farm etc ....
I love your videos. You seem to answer all the questions I have before I even ask them.
Bro ain't that the truth a nice inhale of freshly brewed coffee bean is like nothing else❤
Try making your cold brew at room temp. Ive experimented a bit and cold immersion is whats making it more acidic. I typically brew mine for 8ish hours at room temp and then a couple hours in the fridge 😊
I was curious how long a coffee tree lives?
Coffee trees can easily live to 100 years. Their peak productivity tends to be between 3 and 15 years or so but as long as they stay healthy, they will continue to produce fruit.
Such an informative video thank you so much
So glad you enjoyed it!
U didn't press the juice of those coffee grinds
Right! Of course, if you do that you'll get a LOT of gritty fine particles for only a tiny bit more brewed coffee. Some people find the grit acceptable but, most people really don't enjoy it. Cheers!
Great ideas! Thank you. 😊
You're welcome!
Would much rather replace both the voda and coffee with Mr Black
Would definitely be simpler. . . But you are not going to get the same flavor because Mr Black used a cold infusion. This may be your preference and it's not anyone's place to say one is better than another, simply note that they are very different. You may also have trouble getting the same light and fluffy texture when omitting the espresso.
I have a french press and still end up with ground coffee in the drinking coffee.
You might need to: 1. Grind more coarsely 2. Let it sit longer after brewing 3. Pour more gently so not to disturb settled particles 4. Don't expect to filter 100% of the liquid out without using additional filtration (basically, leave the last 10% and you won't get grounds) Some or all of those tips might give you the solution you need. Cheers!!
Perfect video. Exactly what I needed!
Glad to hear it!
the refresh rate on your lights….. not great. change camera shutter speed or go to faster refresh on lights
whiskey and coffee the best combo
Absolutely!
Getting drunk for work sounds awesome until the next day 😂
Difficult to maintain, that's for sure! 🤣
We went to the big island of Hawaii and stayed in Kona. I am not a coffee drinker but that coffee was amazing. Sending your link to my son who is a coffee lover like you. Very interesting information.
Glad you enjoyed it!
what about dutch coffee or japanese cold brew?
As I understand it, basically: Dutch coffee = the cold brew I made Japanese iced coffee = the iced coffee I made
@@KonaEarthCoffee sorry, I knew it was a japanese style, couldn't remember where. The "Kyoto style Cold Brew" or what has also been known as the Dutch Cold Brew, using ice (water) and the glass tower/contraption
I'm not sure about the ice tower, probably works better than room temp immersion when using overly dark coffee.
Are there any uses for the cherry? Is it edible?
@lenaperkins6215 Yes! We compost it to use as fertilizer in the orchard but some dry the skins and make a tea. I've also hear of coffee cherry flour.
It is also used in making liqueur! You might find more uses for it by looking under the other name for coffee cherries: Cascara www.theliquoristblog.com/cascara-liqueur/
Are you using a knockoff Muniq Tetradrip? And judging the product based on the knockoff? A bit unfair I think
I'm using a "knockoff" version of all of them. And I'm judging the knockoffs, not name brand products. And I'm not hiding this in the video. The main reason is that most people will see a product with a name brand price tag and immediately look for a cheap knockoff. And as long as something is designed with the same principles, it's helpful to see how the designs compare, either the name brand products against each other, or cheap knockoffs against each other. And actually you were to compare name brand to knockoffs but limited to only one design, that would be valid also. The only invalid comparison would be to use one design in a name brand version, and a different design in a knockoff version. Which of course is NOT even close to what this video is. It should also be noted by the viewer that the only noticeable difference between a Tetradrip and the product I used in the video is the price tag.
@@KonaEarthCoffee Absolutely not true. I have tried both the tetradrip and this knockoff side by side. The knockoff is such a hassle to assemble (because of the much harder, thicker metal) that this alone is reason enough to pay the premium of the original. But thank you for being upfront about the authenticity of the product being reviewed. A bit of a tangent, I know, but for what it's worth, I've also tried the others you're comparing with. As with any dripper, each needs to be dialed in differently as the extraction/drawdown mechanics will be different. I don't invalidate your experience and choosing what you went with. Just saying that some might find the other options equally valid (nothing inherently worse in one vs the others). Taste aside though (which is agreed the most important metric) the one that you went with is quite finicky to get used to having the filter in just the right way (and stay put)
Well, there may be an assembly difference, but since they use the same size and shape of filter, they are the exact same size and geometric shape (and they must be the same because both are 3 equal flat sides perfectly holding the same size filter) they are going to brew the same. But a bigger point needs to be addressed. This video was a review for brewing while traveling. People aren't going to want to adjust their grind size from their home dripper to their travel dripper when they use the same filter papers. For that matter, I don't either. And I reject that different V60 filter-using drippers actually need different grind sizes. Maybe you can get better performance out of one or the other if you do fine tune your grind but, that's kind of the point: if there's one that doesn't require that attention to detail - that's the one I want! And I think most people would agree. Honestly, I'm shocked by your last comment because in my experience the spiral one doesn't need fiddling because it has so little friction that the filter paper self centers. And since filming this video I've bought and tested half a dozen more (using them for a Labor Day party) and they all work better than the Tetradrip design. I didn't need to adjust my grind, didn't need to fiddle with the papers. Now I get that you don't agree, but that's ok. Not everyone needs to agree, not everyone needs to like the same things. And not everyone cares about creating the perfect test to get the best out of a given brewer, but instead testing in a way that is accurate to the most common use case for consumers. Cheers!
@@KonaEarthCoffee well there you go then-if you don’t want to adjust grind sizes between drippers even if these have different drawdowns and extraction dynamics, then we’re definitely on different boats. You seem to have found a dripper that just happened to have a similar enough behavior to what you have at home. Good for you then. Others may have different home setups and the advice here won’t apply. And then there are those who again dialing in differently because different drippers do behave differently. For that matter, different coffees also need different recipes (ratios, grind sizes, temperatures, etc). You are right though-most people don’t bother with such details. In the same way that most aren’t into specialty coffee. Or aren’t into manual brewing. Or just don’t care about anything beyond instant. The argument from popularity… anyway, cheers
Maybe you missed this in the video but I specifically said that all of these brewers are meant to use Hario V60 papers and mimic the performance of an actual Hario dripper. If a given brewer requires a different grind size, it has by definition deviated from the gold standard, i.e. the Hario V60. But if a brewer doesn't require changes to grind size or technique, it has by definition more closely adhered to the same gold standard design. Since all 3 of these brewers are intended to mimic a V60, it's more than reasonable to proclaim the one that deviated the least to be the winner. Think about it, you wouldn't need to switch grind size or technique if you went from one glass V60 to an identical glass V60. So if an alternative brewer gives identical performance, doesn't that give it a better score than one which brews differently? Honestly man, I don't understand how all this equates to my perspective on my preferred brewer being equal to pandering to instant coffee drinkers 🤣
Thompson Kevin Davis Robert Thompson Patricia
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Yes Sir!! 😊
Yup!
I can confirm that it was so good, none of it survived the buffet line. People vacuumed it up!
It is the same as a Mr coffee! I don't understand why people need to go to Coffee places to get a " pour over" and pay all that money.
Well, I think saying it's the same a Mr Coffee shows why you don't understand why people pay a premium for pour over: you have come to this opinion likely without actually having tasted pour over, especially pour over made with specialty coffee. Mr Coffee and similar inexpensive automatic coffee makers do not taste the same for a few simple reasons. 1. They pour the water in such a way as to over-extract the grounds in the center and under-extract the coffee on the edges. 2. They brew with boiling water which extracts better than even just slightly cooler water, exacerbating the bitterness caused by point one. 3. No one who uses a Mr Coffee uses a scale to measure their coffee grounds measures the proper ratio for great taste or even understands that this is even a thing. And finally, basically no one who uses a Mr Coffee fresh grinds their coffee to the correct grind size or uses properly roasted fresh coffee. The flavor difference between a cheap automatic coffee maker and a proper pour over is like comparing stevia to quality cane sugar. You might be fine with stevia, but literally NOBODY thinks it tastes anywhere close to as good as real cane sugar. Cheers!
Is it possible to have the link to you flavor wheel in the background ? Superb video, a new subsriber gained !!
Thank you, glad you liked it! Here you go: www.etsy.com/listing/1360577183/coffee-tasters-flavor-wheel-poster?gpla=1&gao=1&&CjwKCAjw_4S3BhAAEiwA_64Yhl--1nk0rkGsKWcppZNZSZwEej1_PRQ2wb2ERKf8vcjKZ2NgkVaLFBoCLyAQAvD_BwE_k_&:pla-293946777986_c__1360577183_5316673255&gad_source=1&gclid=CjwKCAjw_4S3BhAAEiwA_64Yhl--1nk0rkGsKWcppZNZSZwEej1_PRQ2wb2ERKf8vcjKZ2NgkVaLFBoCLyAQAvD_BwE
I also use clean folded cotton handkerchief on top of strainer
A great idea if you want to filter out any of the coffee oils!
That’s cowboy coffee you hipster turd!!
I appreciate your passion, but I must disagree with your statement that what I made is cowboy coffee. According to cowboy Kent Rollins, cowboy coffee is made using a pot of boiling water, not merely boiled water in a pitcher. Also, cowboy coffee doesn't typically involve breaking or scooping the crust because a crust can't form in actively boiling water. Therefore, calling what I made cowboy coffee is a disservice to both cupping (which is WAY older than cowboys or the USA!) and cowboy coffee which is fundamentally different from what I made. And if you're going to come at a hipster (scatological or otherwise) make sure you're right or you might get owned again by a hipster
I would suggest a different methodology next time. The cold brew was made in an immersion method via the french press. The iced coffee wasn't. Try making the iced coffee in the french press or with the aeropress using a metal filter and the pressure stopper attachment. It creates the immersion brew and keeps the oil. Using a paper filtered iced coffee to compare to a cold brew keeping it's oils (even if you paper filter it later) kind of does a disservice to the iced coffee version. It's just a more apples to apples version in my eyes.
I see your point!
I mostly use this method. I simple mix up the grinds and water and let sit 24 hours or longer in jar. When I want a cup I pout out of jar into aeropress with metal filter and flow control. Works perfect every time and it seems to work well with any grind. (I accently bought a fine grind but it work just fine.)
It's very forgiving to brew cold or room temperature. Especially with a really good coffee!
Talk about how to dispose of the grounds without putting them down the drain. French press users have this problem...especially with finely ground coffees.
Good idea for a video!
Scoop it into the trash or compost
That's what I do.
Thanks for the comparison! Just wondering if the temp of cold brew was also room temp bc it seemed to have more ice.
Glad you liked it! No, it was fridge chilled.
Love your shirt
Me too! It was a gift from my wife.
good ideas and great presentation. many thanks!
Glad you enjoyed it!
I have a similar one, and while it may not *_technically_* be espresso, if done properly its damn close and i love it 😂
I agree!
This is a bigger version of a Cuban coffee espresso maker….
Yes it is!
Why the paper? Useless
less sediment, fewer oils and less robust flavor.
Actually, it gives more even extraction by slowing the flow of water out of the puck. When the fines from a high flow area meet the paper it slows down the water and forces it through areas of the coffee puck with lower flow. You end up with a higher extraction because you prevent channeling. Any claimed loss of flavor through filtering is not only made up for but actually massively outweighed by the overall higher flavor production when using a filter paper.
I notice you put so much water with the Moka pot you can try until the valve the taste will be different
I filled to the valve.
Is it important to use a filter paper when using moka pot?
No
If you want the best performance, yes. But you don't have to use it. It helps the water flow very evenly through the coffee and filters out any ultrafine grit from the final cup. Not necessary, but helpful.
Ugh I miss French press coffee. I had a toddler and I can't find the time now
Oh really? I am sorry to hear that. We have two little ones and it can be very hard sometimes. I have found that I can make time to brew coffee if I give our two year old a stool so he can stand at the counter and watch me. Sometimes it's not about getting them out from under foot but instead about making them feel included in what we are doing.
The DM47 is so underrated
I couldn't agree more. The thing is built like a tank, has a tiny footprint, runs as smooth as a Cadillac and just hogs through beans like a beast. The only thing I dislike is the huge power brick. But I guess that's the trade off with the small footprint.
It's funny how grinding became the hot coffee topic. This is the perfect introduction, thank you.
Glad it was helpful!
Great video !!!! ☕️👍🏽😎
Thank you!!
Hey! I’ve been grinding coffee each morning for the last year. What a brilliant little hobby I’ve found! As I progress through coffee brewing I’ve struggled to find where to invest my money into higher tier gear, this vid was amazing to help this issue out! Thank you! ❤
We are so happy to hear that!
1 mL = 1 gram ONLY in the case of water
Working in a kitchen it’s close enough to consider it the same when measuring any water or alcohol based liquid: Milk Vinegar Liquor etc. Any measurement of those kind of liquids can be considered equal with water and measured by weight on a scale. Yes they will be slightly different than exactly 1:1 but they will be so close as not actually matter.
This is a really good piece of advice!
How to make coffee brewing lame and gay 101
grr math makes me angry
If you mean "making it take less steps and making coffee so good it will give you a smile" then, yes!
So, to make a 1 litter pot of coffe im suppose to use 500gr of coffe?
Use the ratio 1:16
60 grams of coffee per liter of water.
Sarah is correct here, but if you click through to the linked video you will get a full and easy to understand explanation.
Wack
-a-mole
i use my $1 plastic camping coffee maker with a filter for 30 years works great. no need for this fancy stuff
Not everyone has 30 years of experience making coffee, and not everyone wants to carefully learn the skill of brewing delicious coffee simply by eyeballing it and using their intuition. That takes dedication and LOTS of experience, something that feels a bridge too far for many people, especially just to get a nice cup of coffee every morning. Actually, most people just want coffee without guesswork (or just plain "work" at all, really) or developing the skill you have clearly acquired over many years of experience. And that's where techniques like this come in: no guesswork, hardly any skill using a kitchen tool (a scale) that costs about $10. Far from being "fancy" it's the simplest, fastest, and easiest way to get what you want, which for most of us is insurance that our morning cup of Joe won't taste bad. It takes no extra time, it takes less effort, (especially mental effort!) and gives you great coffee the first time - Every. Single. Time. Remember, not everybody has your skill and intuition. Some of us need tools to help along the way!