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Colombia Bruselito

#349 – Lot#2 (закінчився) | Вершки | Диня | Карамель | Малина | Слива | Оцінка 87

 

The Bruselito coffee is our crafted concept for high-end micro lot blends from the vereda Bruselas and the surroundings of Pitalito. The selection and combination of lots is based on cup profile, score, and geography. These coffees comes from small farmers that are a member of Cadefihuila Cooperative. We work alongside exporters having coffee programs with the cooperatives targeting certain areas, groups or producers within the cooperative focusing on quality.

General info:

Location: Huila > Pitalito

VarietyColombia, Caturra, Castillo

ProcessingFully washed

Founded: 1963

Origin type: Cooperation

Cup Lot#2: Poached plums, melted butter and caramel. Panela and sweet honeydew melon. Juicy and delicate with a finish of raspberry.

Cup Lot#4: Nice berries, good body, very solid and sweet. Classic but complex, Baked pear, pinecone, great cookiedough sweetness, cardemom, nutmeg.

 

About

The Bruselito series is our crafted concept for high-end micro lot blends from the vereda Bruselas and the surroundings of Pitalito. It’s 50 -100 bag lots, and represents great cup quality at a lower price point than our other Colombian coffees. The selection and combination of lots is based on cup profile, score, and geography.

Pitalito is the main city located in the south of Huila. It is surrounded with coffee areas of amazing potential. The altitudes for our coffees generally ranges from 1600 – 2000 masl. The farmers often work in groups, and are selling the coffee to the local bodegas (purchasing points for parchment)

The name Bruselito was created by accident when we were at the cupping table in the Cooperatives warehouse. We were cupping micro lots, but were searching for some volumes for roasters that had addressed the need of a good coffee for their espresso. As we are committed to a micro lot program with some producers in Bruselas we tried to mix a few deliveries from Bruselas, but found that there are producers in Pitalito too that have profiles that suites. We have made this in to a concept where we will continue to build seasonal blends based on the same concept.

These coffees comes from small farmers that are a member of Cadefihuila Cooperative. We work alongside with exporters having coffee programs with the cooperatives targeting certain areas, groups or producers within the cooperative focusing on quality. As for all the coffee and projects we are doing in Colombia we are paying high premiums based on scores, above the daily coffee prices determined by the FNC. All our coffee has to meet our standards on moisture below 11% and scores above 86 points. We are there to cup at site many times a year, as well as we visit the producers and Cooperative to better manage the supply chain.

Cadefihuila is a Cooperative working in the north, south and western Huila. They were founded in 1963, and have thousands of producers with between 1-3 hectares of coffee. Many have great potential, but they need help and support to get the quality up to the level required buy us and our market.

 

Picking

Coffee is picked in 3-4 passes. Meaning the producers/workers pick the more or less ripe cherries in one block. Then they might wait a few weeks until it’s again a descent amount of ripe cherries to pick in that same place. Generally, the first and last pass is of lower quality, and the second and third will be considered as the best, with more ripe cherries and uniform quality. When we can, we try to buy parchment harvested in these two passes.

 

Processing

The coffee from Huila is generally fully washed, meaning pulped and fermented the traditional way. There are a few exceptions where farmers are using eco-pulpers with mechanical removal of mucilage, and/or are doing honeys, but it’s still not to common.

 

Dry fermentation

This is the most common and widely used method. The farmer will have a small beneficio, a small manual or electric pulper and a fermentation tank. They pulp the cherries in the afternoon. The coffee is going straight from the pulper in to the fermentation tank. It can sit there from one to two days, depending on the temperature. Higher temperature will speed up the fermentation process, and lower temperature will slow it down. Some producers do intermediate rinsing with water, that can also help them control the process.

 

Washing and grading

They normally stir the coffee in tanks or small channels before they remove the floaters. For the ones without channels it’s common to wash the coffees in the fermentation tank and skim off the floaters before it goes to the drying.

 

Drying

For the smallholders in regions like Huila the coffee is commonly sun dried in parabolic dryers that almost works as green houses. The better producers have well ventilated facilities. There are many different variations and constructions, but generally they are all systems that is able to protect the coffee from rain. We have generally seen that the producers that have constructions with good ventilation and manage to dry the coffee down to below 11% in 10 – 18 days often have very good and consistent coffee. Drying in Huila is a big challenge due to rain and high humidity. During drying the producers hand sort the parchment coffee for impurities and defects. By receiving premium payments, the producers can improve their facilities, by building new or reconstruct the dryers to increase ventilation and potentially add shade nets to slower drying, and hence improve the quality and longevity of the coffee.

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