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Guatemalan Premium Santa Rosa – Blue Ayarza – Natural Processed

A solid cup from light to dark, but for most drinking, a medium roast will be the way to go. Sweet with just a pinch of citric upfront, medium bodied, good mouthfeel, just a pinch of fruitiness and ends with a nice malty undertone. Lighter roast get a bit brighter and slightly more fruity but can risk a little grassy, medium roasts present great balance to the flavors and was very easy drinking, darker roasts retain a lot of sweetness and hefty malty tones, but will get pretty roasty/smoky. If drinking for drip/pour-over, medium roasts are where to go. If using for blending, espresso or cold brew, light or dark roasts can produce some really tasty results.

Ethiopian Yirgacheffe Worka Chelchele – Washed Gr. 2

Good from light to dark but we thought best at a strong medium to dark roast. Light roasts are more citric and floral with wonderful aromatics a sweet edged, a bit punchy in the citric department and very little of that wonderful chocolate tone that fuller roasts will bring. Medium roasts will bring some lovely balance to the cup, less aromatic than the light roasts, but you can still tell you have a nice Ethiopian with one sniff. A pinch of crispness upfront on top of a well developed chocolaty base tone. A unique spice note pops out, a stretch for some, but we would say slightly minty. Darker roasts are real robust, strong and semi-sweet, more bakers-chocolate like with tea like spice in the aftertaste.

Ethiopian Yirgacheffe Washed Gr. 2 – Worka Chelchele

Crisp, clean and exotic. Good aromatics: nothing like grinding a fresh Ethiopian with its floral, jasmine and spice notes to tickle your nose. Lighter roasts have a little acidity and floral note upfront, mostly citric but the floral and a peachy like soft fruit tone can be found. The balance of the cup comes from a semi-tea-like chocolate factor. I tend to think of it as chocolate spice notes but many tongues can pick up a little black tea note. Medium roasts have just a pinch of citric acidic, builds a thicker body and brings forth more of the chocolaty cup profile, reducing the acidity slightly. Darker roasts are always tasty for those who like fuller roasts. This is how they would traditionally serve these beans in Ethiopia. Almost a shame, for it loses the cool spice and lighter floral tone balance but equally as tasty if you like more chocolaty cups with some spice.

Burman Coffee

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