Description
This is a greenhouse dried coffee from Bella Carmona – LPZ only greenhouse dries his very best lots to help control and cure the beans to perfection.
Bella Carmona is one of the most superb regional blends a roaster can find in Central America. Luis Pedro and his team at the Bella Vista wet mill not only personally manage each of the 18 farms in the blend; they also work like perfectionists at the cupping table to maintain the quality of the blend, shipping what they believe is a true representation of the Antigua valley’s volcanic and bourbon-based terroir. We buy a variety of Bella Carmona coffees each year and they routinely astound us with how early they arrive and how crisp and sweet they taste. This lot was dried in Bella Vista’s custom greenhouse on raised screens, a longer process than the traditional patios that promises a longer shelf life to the green.
Tasting Notes: Great from light to dark! Antigua’s are generally gentle cups of coffee with a chocolaty versus floral cup profile. This one is a great example. Lighter roasts will be more floral than chocolaty with some clear acidity, clean cup but enough acidity some might want to avoid lighter roast points. Medium roasts are well balanced with the floral/chocolaty with just a hint of some acidity, a little spice note pops out in the aftertaste. Darker roasts are tasty, strong and chocolaty, not too roasty with just a hint of floral in the aftertaste.
Roasting Notes: Easy bean to roast and play around with. Even roasting with medium chaff levels. We liked it best in the light to medium roast range but will have some crisp acidic features. Smooth, creamy and chocolaty into the fuller roasts, which is equally as nice of a cup. A little roasty note touching or into 2nd crack.
Welcome to Antigua
The city of Antigua is in many ways a modern coffee Eden. It’s iconic, laid back, gorgeously ornate, and for a city of its size it is absolutely teeming with historic coffee infrastructure. It also was the center of Guatemala’s specialty universe for many years. Prior to other departments in Guatemala having their own name recognition, coffees from all over the country were regularly transited to Antigua mills and exported as “Antigua” coffee, simply because its reputation was so strong. (Some departments, like Quiché, continue to have strong cherry pipelines to Antigua and struggle for their own name recognition in the market.)
The Antigua valley itself is a gifted area for coffee: it’s accessible and flat, highly volcanic, and older farms remain planted with majority bourbon-based genetics under very precisely managed shade canopy. The best coffees of the valley are decadent with butterscotch or marzipan-like sweetness, with brightness ranging from piquant lemonade to dessert wine or tangy dried fruit.
Guatemala’s best centralized wet mills and boutique exporters are based in and around Antigua. There are hundreds of farms in the greater area, from the city’s legacy estates to patchwork smallholder communities climbing most of the way up Volcán de Agua (which is not flat!), one of three looming stratovolcanoes that seem to be visible from every street corner in town and play a large part in Antigua’s famous soil composition. Such a variety of producers begets coffees with endless combinations of microclimates, elevations and varieties. There is a lot to work with here, and a lot of talent.
“LPZ” and the Bella Vista mill
Luis Pedro Zelaya (LPZ) is a fourth-generation producer and miller who for the past 20 years has established one of the best quality reputations in the country. Originally an employee of Bella Vista, he now runs the entire combination wet and dry mill in Antigua. Bella Vista services the coffee produced from LPZ’s own family estates and numerous other legacy farms which he manages via a unique profit-sharing agreement with the owners. Many of these farms are among the oldest in the country. Bella Vista also processes coffee from hundreds of smallholders across the greater Antigua area, most notably along the slopes of Volcán de Agua, whose blend is sold as “Hunapú”, after the local indigenous title of the volcano. As a result of relentless perfectionism from harvest management to dry-milling and customer service, the brands designed and produced by LPZ and his quality team, particularly Bella Carmona and Hunapú, are some of the best-recognized Central American coffees in the specialty world.
Processing Detail & Quality Control
Cherry is delivered daily at Bella Vista from all over the valley. Processing is separated into numerous channels that represent Bella Carmona farms, Hunapú farms, and microlots such as this one, in which only the bourbon variety from each farm is picked and combined. Once inspected and weighed, cherry is depulped and fermented overnight in one of the mill’s many tanks, washed clean the next day, and moved to small raised screens inside a massive custom “greenhouse”, or solar dryer, constructed on the mill’s patio a few years ago. Coffee in the greenhouse takes twice as long to dry as the patio, the belief being that a slower dehydration is gentler on the cell structure and allows the internal water to bond stronger—both contributing to a longer shelf life compared with patio-dried coffee.
Each individual batch of cherry is tracked electronically using a software created by Bella Vista, and drying or finished parchment is tagged with a QR code that allows the team to scan and review the exact blend in each batch, by contributing farm or farmer, variety, and location. This traceability follows each lot to the cupping table, where the Bella Vista team approves individual day lots for blending and shipment.
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