The right coffee berry is typically a deep red color when it is ripe. However, some varieties may also appear yellow or purple when they are ready for harvest. The ideal color indicates that the berry has reached its peak sweetness and flavor, essential for producing high-quality coffee. Harvesting at this stage ensures the best taste in the final brew.
A berry color or a reddish pink color!
Coffee berry has a fruity and slightly sweet taste, with hints of tartness and earthiness. When compared to brewed coffee, coffee berry has a more complex and nuanced flavor profile, with notes of berries, citrus, and floral undertones. Brewed coffee, on the other hand, has a more intense and robust flavor, with a balance of bitterness, acidity, and richness.
If its an apple it is therefore a monkey.
Coffee fruit is edible and has been eaten by people in coffee growing regions for thousands of years. The coffee fruit, know as coffee cherry, has some amazing properties that impact health positively. Check out this hiloliving.blogspot.com/2009/07/hawaiis-amazing-coffee-fruit.html for more information.
PINK
Actually the color of coffee with no additives added can vary greatly. The color of coffee is determined by what coffee berries are used and the duration of the roasting process.
red
any will do.. but the nice color for coffee shop is green..
The taste of a coffee cherry is typically described as sweet and fruity, with flavors like cherry, berry, or citrus.
her favorite color is purple of couse!!!!!!!!!!!!
The phrase seems to have originated in Chaucer's "Canterbury Tales", The Cooks Tale, line 44: There lived a 'prentice, once, in our city,And of the craft of victuallers was he;Happy he was as goldfinch in the glade,Brown as a berry, short, and thickly made,With black hair that he combed right prettily. Now I didn't find anyone who claimed to know what berry Chaucer had in mind. I'm going to make a guess that he was using some obsolete meaning for berry to speak of grain. Whole, unground grains are sometimes referred to as berries, such as wheatberry. The dictionary.net definition of "berry" is a coffee bean, so "brown as a berry" could mean "brown as a coffee bean." However, if indeed Chaucer is the origin of the phrase, toasted wheatgrains are more likely than coffee beans, since Europeans in Chaucer's time did not have coffee beans.
purplish red