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Image / Near Soyapango, El Salvador, C.A. Cascara, a by-product of coffee, is dried …

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Title
Near Soyapango, El Salvador, C.A. Cascara, a by-product of coffee, is dried with the same care and by the same method as the coffee beans. This is the outer pulp and skin of the coffee berries which is crushed away from the beans in the early part of the coffee processes. This residue is handled after the coffee harvest has been handled, and the stuff is first burned and then spread out on the drying racks of the "beneficio", racked and hoed constantly to get the entire benefit of the sun's rays. This cascara is used for supplementing cattle feed, as well as in soap making. Scene at the modern beneficio (coffee-processing plant) of a coffee hacienda
Creator
James C. Sawders
Contributor
Gifford M. Mast
Date Created and/or Issued
1950
Publication Information
Keystone View Company
Contributing Institution
UC Riverside, California Museum of Photography
Collection
Keystone-Mast Collection
Rights Information
REQUIRED CREDIT LINE MUST STATE: Keystone-Mast Collection, UCR/California Museum of Photography, University of California at Riverside. Please contact UCR/California Museum of Photography for information about the copyright status of this item. Some materials in these collections may be protected by the U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C.). In addition, the reproduction, and/or commercial use, of some materials may be restricted by gift or purchase agreements, donor restrictions, privacy and publicity rights, licensing agreement(s), and/or trademark rights. Distribution or reproduction of materials protected by copyright beyond that allowed by fair use requires the written permission of the copyright owners. To the extent other restrictions apply, permission for distribution or reproduction from the applicable rights holder is also required. Responsibility for obtaining permissions, and for any use rests exclusively with the user.
Description
Near Soyapango, El Salvador, C.A. Cascara, a by-product of coffee, is dried with the same care and by the same method as the coffee beans. This is the outer pulp and skin of the coffee berries which is crushed away from the beans in the early part of the coffee processes. This residue is handled after the coffee harvest has been handled, and the stuff is first burned and then spread out on the drying racks of the "beneficio", racked and hoed constantly to get the entire benefit of the sun's rays. This cascara is used for supplementing cattle feed, as well as in soap making. Scene at the modern beneficio (coffee-processing plant) of a coffee hacienda.
This print is appended with “SS” [Social Sciences] to distinguish it from [1996.0009.KU104569] in 601-13-1 (duplicate)
Type
image
Format
Keystone photo print 7.18 in. x 4.18 in.
Identifier
http://ark.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/kt938nc6m7
1996.0009.KU104569.SS
Language
English
Subject
Facilities
Agricultural facilities
Coffee plantations
Beverage industry
Coffee industry
People
Farms
Plantations
Place
North and Central America
El Salvador
San Salvador
Soyapango
Latitude: 13 50 N
Longitude: 088 55 W

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