Description
A very special coffee and project! For this one, we worked with some close friends of ours @ Royal Coffee. Very challenging to source single farmer Ethiopian coffees. One needs to bypass the internal auction system, which almost all Ethiopian coffee flows through. Royal with their years of experience and relationships at source, were the backbone for this project. The Idido area is one of the most renowned producing areas in Ethiopia, and to track every bean back to some of the best land in Idido is one unique offering.
This is a boutique Ethiopian production, not a “large” screened mill chop. Although very clean with low defect levels; considered a top grade coffee, one will see both large and small beans in the mix. Highly rated but a little unique for a natural, many of the tastes will be a little closer to a washed processed coffee.
Tasting Notes:
This Ethiopian cup is a super clean; an awesome and unique example of a high end Ethiopian. Best served at the light to medium roast levels; jasmine aromatics with wild more lemon/floral acidity, balancing with a rustic chocolate and tea like spiced undertone. There is a little hint of fruit in the cup but its pretty faint, gives the cup great sweetness and depth of flavor. Reminiscent of a Yemen or Harrar coffee. Lighter roasts will have some citric acidity and stronger floral tones balanced with a faint tea like chocolaty undertone, a little fruit note pops out as the cup cools. Medium roasts really mellow out the acidity and promote the chocolaty cup profile, adds a little jazzy spice note in the aftertaste. A very smooth, balanced cup with exotic highlights. Darker roast burn out all the fruity and acidic notes, gets a little smoky roasty with strong bakers chocolate tones.
Roasting Notes:
A bit higher chaff levels, fairly even roasting even with the bean size variance. Light to dark it is a tasty cup. Bright, floral and fruity with tea like attributes at the light roasts. Very bakers chocolaty and strong with some spice/roasty/smoky notes at the darker roasts.
Regional Details:
Idido is part of Yirgacheffe, one of 8 woredas, or districts, that together comprise the dense and competitive highland zone of Gedeo. (The entire Gedeo zone is often referred to as “Yirgacheffe” thanks to the notoriety of this particular district.) Idido is one of Ethiopia’s best-known communities. It’s centrally located among Yirgacheffe producers, being just a few kilometers outside the town of Yirga Chefe itself—a surprisingly small community given its mythical stature as one of the world’s most gifted coffee landscapes. As a coffee terroir, this part of Gedeo has for decades been considered a benchmark for beauty and complexity in arabica coffee—known for being beguilingly ornate and jasmine-like when fully washed, and seductively punchy and sweet when sundried–and hardly requires an introduction.
Processing Details:
Alamayehu Gosaye grows coffee in the historic Idido community of Ethiopia. Alamayehu’s land totals 7 acres, considered large for this area, where less than an acre is the norm. The vast majority of coffee processing in Ethiopia is centralized due to complete lack of infrastructure or efficiencies at the farm level, but larger plots allow for greater personal control. Alamayehu grew up working alongside his father on coffee farms, and now the father of six children, he has succeeded in managing his own farm. During the harvest, handpicked cherries are all floated for density and then placed directly onto drying beds, where they will be consistently turned and rotated for the few weeks that drying requires. The beds are covered at night to protect the cherry from settling humidity, as well as for a few hours each afternoon to prevent scorching from the searingly-hot midday sun.
Exporting Details:
There are precious few single-farm coffees available from this part of Ethiopia. For the past 10 years, Royal, with support from select cooperatives, led the formation of the Single Farmer Lots Program, in order to break off single farmer lots from the larger cooperative blends sold anonymously through the Ethiopian Commodity Exchange (ECX), taking custody of these precious coffees through a direct sale. The program was a unique micro-channel of almost unprecedented specificity in coffee supply from Ethiopia during those first years. Farmers with the drive and means to sell direct were supported by Royal, and, in turn, our most enthusiastic buyers of Ethiopian coffee had access to a portfolio of single-farm lots, un-diluted by the typical cooperative- and exporter-level consolidations. The Single Farmer Lots Program represented a very sweet end to a chaotic chapter in Ethiopia’s coffee history, and we think it was a foundational model for what is happening now: the emergence of a new generation of micro-exporters engaged in start-up relationship farming in Ethiopia’s world-famous southern zones, putting more diversity and traceability into the global market than ever before.
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