While it may seem easy to purchase Kona coffee, without the seal of approval from the Kona coffee farms you're not drinking 100% pure Kona coffee. The Kona coffee bean is grown on the islands of Hawaii at 800 feet above sea level in the north and south Kona mountain districts.

Over 600 distinct different farms are being farmed in the hills of Mauna Loa and Mount Hualalai by farmers who have been working the land since the 19th century. At one point time in the 1800's the coffee plant was imported to the Hawaiian Islands, plantation owners then began to grow coffee and developed the Kona flavor. Around about the 19th century a crash in the coffee market happened and many of the plantation owners abandoned their farms to the workers.Workers continued to develop the unique Kona flavor and were eventually able to buy the plantations from the original owners. This resulted in five acre farms of Kona coffee beans belonging to different families who still work those farms today.

There are a wide variety of blends that can be purchased at your favorite market.  In fact some of them have become favorite flavors such as hazelnut, breakfast blend, dark roast, and others. Although you may think you're drinking Kona coffee when you drink these blends the fact of the matter is that they're blended with other coffee beans from around the world.Having the seal of approval of the Kona Farms is the only way to ensure that you're drinking 100% Kona coffee. It's okay to purchase a Kona coffee blend, but remember, it may only contain 10% actual Kona coffee.

Kona coffee flavor is an extremely sweet smooth coffee flavor, and is well known throughout the world.A single coffee plant can produce 3-5 pounds of beans during a single growing season. In February, the trees bloom and then along about March, the green coffee beans develop. Harvesting usually begins in August and can go completely through December.  While the farms are family owned, there is a Kona coffee board that oversees to make sure that coffee that is purer is labeled as pure, and those that are blends are not.

There are many different types of coffee that is available today for your drinking pleasure.  The Hawaiian Kona coffee blend is one of the most sought after.  Many times, inferior beans are added to different beans from around the world to produce a Kona coffee blend.These lower quality beans never would have been able to make it into a pure Kona blend. Just as with everything else, coffee beans are rated according to color, crispness, humidity level, and flavor, and only the best go into 100% pure Kona coffee.