Kenya Gichathaini AA - Filter Roast

 

Our first release of 2026 is a banger! The Gichathaini embodies everything we love about high quality coffees from this part of Africa.
Vibrant and intense acidity carries with it the flavour of blackberries and currants. There is juiciness, like the syrupy sweetness of a Pomegranate and a lovely tannic structure and bitterness like an assam black tea.


COUNTRY - Kenya
REGION - Nyeri County
ALTITUDE - 1700 M.A.S.L
VARIETAL - SL28, SL34, Ruiru 11
PROCESSING METHOD - Washed
TASTING NOTES -
Blackberry, Pomegranate, Black Tea

 

Situated on the western slopes of Mt. Kenya, the Gichathaini Factory, or wet mill, is one of three mills working with smallholder producers from the Gikanda Farmers’ Cooperative Society.
More than 895 smallholder farmers in Mathira, Nyeri deliver cherry to Gichathaini Factory.
Farmers delivering to Gichanthaini cultivate primarily SL28 and SL34 in small coffee gardens that are, on average, smaller than 1 hectare.

KENYA WASHED PROCESS:
After the coffee cherries have been picked, the cherries are depulped (skin removed) or demucilaged (skin and pulp removed).
The coffees are typically then held in “fermentation tanks” for 24 hours, allowing for a gentle controlled fermentation to cause any remaining pulp to separate from the beans. Fermentation may occur from the moment of harvest until the seeds reach an inhospitable moisture content for them (11% moisture).
After 24-hours, coffee is agitated thoroughly, then fermented a second 24-hours.
After this second day, the fermented water and remaining coffee pulp on the bean are washed off with clean water and soaked again overnight. This step is thought to encourage the coffee bean to germinate again, which contributes to extra sweetness and complexity.
The beans are finally dried for up to 21 days on raised beds until the ideal moisture content is reached.
Typically washed coffees have clean, articulate flavors; caramel or sugary sweetness; a wide spectrum of fruit acidity depending on other factors; capable of bright, crisp notes.

SL28 is among the most well-known and well-regarded varieties of Africa. It has consequently spread from Kenya, where it was originally selected in the 1930s, to other parts of Africa (it is important in Arabica-growing regions of Uganda, in particular) and now to Latin America. The variety is suited for medium to high altitudes and shows resistance to drought, but is susceptible to the major diseases of coffee. SL28 is notable for its rusticity—a quality meaning that it can be left untended for years or even decades at a time, and then return to successful production. There are SL28 trees in many parts of Kenya that are 60-80 years old and still productive

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