Hawaii Part 5: Kona — Where Coffee is King

Red "cherries'' on a Kona coffee tree are the ripe fruit, from which the coffee seeds or beans come from.

KONA, HAWAII — When you think of the Kona district on the Big Island, it’s hard not to think of coffee immediately.

The first coffee was planted in Kona around 1828 by missionary Samuel Ruggles, where it thrived because of the mineral-rich volcanic soil.

It is now Kona’s most famous crop and probably its most expensive. You’ll find top-grade Kona coffee selling for upwards of $38 a pound. Don’t be fooled by the so-called “Kona Blends.” Yes, they’re cheaper — but for a reason. The blends are required to contain only 10 percent Kona coffee. The rest can be made up of much cheaper coffee from elsewhere around the world.

Kona coffee may get even more expensive in the future, as farmers have had to do battle with a pesky, virulent beetle that has been attacking the berries for the past couple of years. Moreover, just like farming elsewhere, it remains a hard profession that younger generations are turning their backs on.

Tom Greenwell is a fourth-generation grower. His great-grandfather, British adventurer, Henry Nicholas Greenwell, was one of the first exporters of Kona coffee in the late 1800s. Today, Tom Greenwell carries on the family tradition, overseeing Greenwell Farms, where the planting and picking are still done by hand on 35 lush acres.

Tom Greenwelll, fourth-generation Kona coffee grower.

Recently, I had a chance to tour the farm with Tom Greenwell during my trip to Hawaii, courtesy of the Hawaii Visitors and Convention Bureau.

Before you even stick your head into the roasting building, the sweet aroma of roasty-toasty beans hits you. It’s like coffee syrup aromatherapy.

Greenwell Farms grows about 280,000 pounds of coffee annually. Small white flowers begin to bloom on the coffee trees in by February, followed by green berries in April. From August through February, the red fruit, known as a “cherry” (because it looks similar to one) has ripened and is ready for picking.

The pulper extracts the beans from the fruit.

The fruit is separated from the seed or bean with a machine known as a pulper. The beans are fermented overnight, then rinsed before being spread out on a rooftop to dry for at least 30 days. After that, the beans go into the roaster for about 15 minutes.

Beans being raked so that they dry evenly.

The beans drying on the roof.

After the drying and fermenting are completed, the beans look like this.

Finally, the beans are roasted.

Connoisseurs say the beans should never be roasted until very dark because that destroys the natural nuttiness, sweetness and smoothness that Kona coffee is known for.

You can be the judge of that at the end of the free tour, which is open to the public daily, when you can taste all the roasted variations of Kona coffee that Greenwell sells. If you visit on a Thursday afternoon, you’re in for another treat, as members of the Kona Historical Society regularly bake traditional Portuguese bread in a large wood-fired oven in the pasture not far from the farm store. The fresh-baked bread is available for purchase that afternoon, too.

Contestants ready their dishes in the annual Kona Coffee Recipe Contest.

Unfortunately, I missed being there on a Thursday for the heavenly, sweet bread. But I managed to partake of a bevy of other good eats when I was invited to be a judge at the 41st Annual Kona Coffee Cultural Festival Recipe Contest.

Held at the Sheraton Keauhou Bay Resort & Spa Convention Center, the contest showcased 35 recipes — all using Kona coffee in some form or another — by professional chefs, amateur cooks and culinary students who competed separately in seven categories.

We 15 judges — which included last year’s winners in the professional chefs categories — were split into groups of three to judge two categories apiece. Yours truly got to help choose the winners of the professional chefs entrees and amateur cooks entrees, who took home trophies and cash or gift card prizes ranging from $50 to $500.

Mind-blowiing coffee-flavored eggplant.

It was fascinating to see the creative ways people found to cook with coffee. For instance, eggplant marinated in coffee? Who would have thunk? But that flavorful pumpernickel crostini topping won Woody and Avia Plaut second place in the amateur entrees category. They were just edged out by the moist and juicy “Kona Kickin’ Chicken” by Kelli Siefke for first place; but beat out third-place “Kona Coffee Braised Beef” by Barbara Kossow.

Coffee-braised beef took second place in the amatuer entrees category.

Coffee-marinated chicken took the grand prize in the amateur entrees category.

In the professional entrees category, third place went to a beautifully plated “Coffee-Braised Wild Boar Ravioli with Hamakua Mushrooms and Puna Ricotta” by Chef Angela Kenyon of the Four Seasons Resort Hualalai; second-place to the fanciest taters ever in “Kona Coffee Happy Shrimp on Potato Skins” by Chef Arthur Mangayayam of the Keauhou Kona Yacht Club; and the grand prize to “Kona Coffee-Rubbed Smoked Brisket Served with 100 Percent Kona Coffee Barbecue Sauce” by Chef Mike Lamb of Mike’s Just Barbecuing.

Coffee-braised wild boar ravioli in a hollowed-out brick of Parmigiano.

Not your usual stuffed potato.

The brisket was the first dish I tasted. From the first bite, I knew immediately it would score toward the top. How can it not with brisket that’s a powerhouse of spicy, sweet, earthy coffee flavors and  smoked for 14 hours until it’s like meat butter in your mouth?

The winning brisket dish that had me going back for seconds.

If you’re ever at the Kona International Market Food Court, you can taste it for yourself. Mike’s Just Barbecuing has a cafe stand there with the brisket on the menu. Don’t pass it up.

Hawaii Part 1: The Unique Honolulu Fish Auction

Hawaii Part 2: Pioneering Oahu Chefs

Hawaii Part 3: A Tale of Two Farmers

Hawaii Part 4: Four Magnificent Meals on Maui

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