
See our slideshow of 10 Great Coffee Trips.
Southern Mexico is the 7th largest coffee producer in the world, with Chiapas (known for Tapachula and Huixta brands), Oaxaca (home to organically grown Pluma), and Veracruz (Altura Orizaba and Altura Huatusco) leading the pack. You can travel quickly next door to Guatemala, the 8th largest producer in the world, and visit the primo growing areas of Antigua Huehuetenango and the Sierra Madre mountains.
It’s just a hop down to South America, where 3rd largest producer, Colombia, grows beans among the foothills of the Andes. The only South American country to have ports in the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans, its coffee industry is not overly burdened with high transportation costs.
Next stop is Ethiopia, the birthplace of coffee, where there are many ceremonial preparations of the brew. Half of the coffee is grown at altitudes 5,000 feet above sea level, and Harrar is where the best of this coffee originates. Cross the southern border into Kenya and seek out some of the best high-mountain coffees on Earth. Then move on to Rwanda which, now stable, grows great coffee on most of its land.
Fly on to Asia to visit Sumatra, the 6th largest island in the world and Indonesia’s top grower of arabica beans. In between coffee tours and tastes, you can enjoy the lush tropical flora and fauna before boarding for the long flight to your final coffee destination—Kona, Hawaii—where you’ll discover the most beautiful coffee bean in the world.
See our slideshow of 10 Great Coffee Trips.