Brazil lays down the law on coffee tastes, aromas

World top coffee producer Brazil is imposing legally binding standards on the quality of ground, roasted coffee sold in its shops in a bid to help encourage consumption.

Agriculture minister Wagner Rossi chose Monday, Brazil’s “National Coffee Day,” to sign a regulation which from Feb. 1, 2011, will do away with products that consistently score less than four out of 10 on a specified set of industry criteria.

“Now this is a regulation everyone has to meet … It will make Brazilian coffee better,” Rossi said after signing the law, which even apply to coffees that are imported, usually for the purpose of bringing a certain taste to a blend.

Laws prohibiting impurities in coffee above 1 percent already exist but the new rules add standards for criteria such as taste, aroma and acidity that can only be determined by the highly sensitive palettes of professional coffee tasters.

“What we hope … is that the better quality will increase consumption,” said Manoel Bertone, head of production at the agriculture ministry. Local coffee industry association ABIC, says studies show people are more likely to become coffee drinkers if they start out drinking better quality brews.

Teams of inspectors around the country will carry out spot checks on coffees taken from supermarket shelves, and roasters flouting the rules will be fined. Persistent offenders could be banned from selling their brand altogether.

Almost all of the coffee exported from Brazil is raw or “green” produce. Preferences for darker or lighter roasts differ around the world and roasters can do this fine-tuning

more accurately when closer to the end consumer or retailer.

But the government and Brazilian roasters want to ensure that, as living standards rise, the local population will not overlook home grown produce because of a perception that Brazil is better at producing quantity rather than quality.

“Those products of lower purity will have more difficulty competing,” Bertone said.

Asked whether relying on human taste buds could lead to bad coffees slipping through the net or good coffees being failed, ABIC executive director Nathan Herskowicz said tasting methods were thorough and virtually infallible.

“Sensorial evaluation is not subjective but objective because it is done by highly trained technicians. It is totally reliable,” he said.

Coffee quality is susceptible to alteration at any stage of its journey from the tree to the jar. It can be damaged by adverse weather during the beans’ development, and also

requires skilled processing after harvesting and when being roasted.

(Editing by Raymond Colitt and Lisa Shumaker)

Indigenous art exhibition heads to China

An exhibition of Indigenous art from the Papunya region in central Australia will go on show in China later this year.

The works from the National Museum of Australia showcase the movement that kick-started the commercialisation of Indigenous art in the 1970s.

The Papunya movement is known for its signature-style dot paintings on large canvases in palettes of red, yellow, black and white.

The artists transformed their Dreamtime stories onto the vast canvases and boards that were provided to them through a government arts program.

By the late 1970s they had established the Papunya Tula Artists Company and the style they have now become renowned for.

Papunya Painting: Out Of The Australian Desert will be on show at the National Art Museum of China in Beijing from June until August.

- AAP

Africa’s “oldest human sacrifice” found in Sudan

London, Feb 6 (ANI): Archaeologists have unearthed a 5,500 year-old Stone Age tomb in northern Sudan, which they believe confirms the location of Africa’s “oldest human sacrifice.”

According to a report in the Telegraph, the archaeological team from France found the tomb in a graveyard in Al-Kadada, north of Khartoum.

They dug up the tomb of a man and a woman facing each other in a ditch, with bodies of two women, two goats and a dog buried nearby.

The discovery of the group “confirms” excavations last year which found traces of the oldest human sacrifice ever identified in Africa, according to Jacques Reinold, a researcher for the French section of the Sudanese antiquities department.

The ancient unearthed bones date from between 3,700 and 3,400 BC, a period considered as one the key stages in the transition from a hunting to a farming society.

The Al-Kadada region, on fertile land alongside the Nile, is regarded as one of the cradles of humanity in the Neolithic era.

Reinold’s team also unearthed polished axes, a millstone, make-up palettes and ceramics at Al-Kadada. (ANI)