Ethiopia Gargari Gutiti Natural

 

This lot comes from smallholder farms in the Gargari Gutiti kebele near Gedeb, in the southernmost part of the Yirgacheffe region. Grown at elevations between 1,950 and 2,200 meters, the coffee is composed of local landrace varieties.

Cherries are handpicked at peak ripeness and dried on raised beds for 18–21 days under careful supervision. The result is a clean and structured natural-process coffee with notes of ripe red fruit, mild citrus, and floral undertones. The acidity is bright but balanced, with a medium body and a dry, clean finish.


COUNTRY - Ethiopia
REGION - Gedeb, Yirgacheffe
ALTITUDE - 1980 - 2037 M.A.S.L
VARIETAL - Ethiopian Heirlooms 74110, 74112
PROCESSING METHOD - Natural
TASTING NOTES -
Mandarin, Berries, Peach, Cocoa 


NATURAL PROCESS
The ripe coffee cherries are hand picked and allowed to dry completely around the seed before being husked or hulled off. While historically this hulling was done by hand with a kind of mortar-and-pestle setup, today it’s done by machinery that can be finely calibrated.
While the coffee is drying the sugars are continually fermenting inside the cherry while there is enough moisture to feed the microorganisms. This can take up to 30 days on average.
Due to the long fermentations, natural processed coffees often display fruity or “pulpy” flavours, often described as “boozy” or “winey”; can also have strong nutty and/or chocolate characteristics, and typically has a heavier or syrupy body

JARC 74110, 74112
JARC (Jimma Agricultural Research Center) Selections are a group of coffee varieties that were developed by the Jimma Agricultural Research Center in Ethiopia in the 1960s and 1970s. These varieties were created through selective breeding, with the goal of improving coffee yields and disease resistance 1. The other type of coffee varieties are regional landraces, which grow in the wild.
The term “heirloom” is often used to describe Ethiopian coffees, but it is not a very useful term as it does not recognize the different varieties of coffee, in fact, the term “heirloom” was used as a catch-all name to describe coffees from Ethiopia by specialty coffee buyers who didn’t know what varieties of Typica and Bourbon they were buying

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