Intelligentsia: Flecha Roja, Costa Rica
Posted September 13th, 2008 by Meg
A few weeks ago I went to Intelligentsia to buy some fresh coffee beans. I arrived relatively close to closing time so it was not busy. The one worker behind the counter, whom I can only describe as “the guy with stretched ears”, was very friendly and helped me through a delicious dilemma: get the Flecha Roja, Costa Rica beans or the Itzamna, Guatemala.
I decided on the former, secretly hoping that when I run out of Flecha Roja, the Itzamna will still be available and in season. My decision was based simply on the appeal of the supposed molasses finish.
Flecha Roja, Costa Rica:
Flavor: Black cherry, red grape
Acidity: Balanced, tangy
Finish: Crisp, punctuated, molasses
My palette was able to pick up the cherry and grape flavors on first sip. It did taste balanced and slightly tangy. I was also able to taste a hint of molasses in between sips. However, I was surprised and delighted to find the coffee to taste better after letting it cool down! The blossomed flavor becomes more pleasant and balanced, the finish becomes gracefully punctuated, and the molasses hints are more apparent and no longer just between sips. Overall, I thoroughly enjoyed these beans and would not hesitate to buy them again.
In 1779, Costa Rican coffee production started in Meseta, an area with near perfect soil and climate conditions for coffee plantation. Costa Rican coffee is Coffea arabica, a species that is indigenous to Ethiopia and Yemen. Arabica coffee is believed to be the first species of coffee to be cultivated and is considered to produce better coffee than other popular commercially grown beans such as Coffea canephora (robusta). Coffee production has played a key role in both Costa Rica’s history and economy. In 2006, coffee was the third cash crop export (first and second going to bananas and pineapples, respectively). The largest coffee growing areas are in the provinces of San José, Alajuela, Heredia, Puntarenas, and Cartago. The provinces of Costa Rica are subdivided into 81 cantons. One San José canton in particular, Tarrazú, is where my Flecha Roja beans were cultivated. This canton is notorious for making great beans. More specifically, my bag of Flecha Roja came from a cooperative called Coope Dota. At the Intelligentsia site, I learned that this coop is very successful and efficient on all levels of production (eco/labo/etc). I’ll drink to that!
Interestingly, I found that the Costa Rica agricultural institute, Centro Agronomico Tropical de Invetigacion y Enseñanza (which translates as Tropical Agricultural Research and Higher Education Center; CATIE) has an amazing program that focuses on coffee and the research and development of coffee technology.
Intelligentsia Coffee & Tea
3922 W Sunset Blvd
Los Angeles, CA 90029
(323) 663-6173