Peru Farmgate Cajamarca Agua Dulce – 29847 – GrainPro Bags – SPOT RCWHSE

Position Spot

Bags 0

Warehouses Oakland

Flavor Profile Red apple, raisin, vanilla, brown sugar

Please Note This coffee landed more than 8 months ago.

Out of stock

About this coffee

Grower

13 farmers organized around Origin Coffee Lab

Altitude

1500 - 1950 masl

Variety

Bourbon, Caturra, Catuaí, Pache, Catimor, Marselleza

Soil

Clay loam

Region

Huabal district, Jaen province, Cajamarca region, Peru

Process

Fully washed and dried on patios and elevated tables inside solar dryers that provide protection from the rain

Harvest

May - September

Certification

Conventional

Coffee Background

In Peru by far the bulk of coffee production comes from small farms owned and managed by people who have for many years followed organic farm management practice attuned to their cultural connection with the land. Producers typically cultivate coffee on just a few acres of land intercropped with shade trees, fruits and vegetables. Small producers are often very careful about picking and sorting their cherry prior to depulping, fermenting, washing, and drying the coffee, all on personal equipment and on personal property. While producers design farm management and post-harvest solutions to fit their varying needs, they also need a strong business alliance to bring their coffee to the international market and earn fair prices, regardless if the coffees are blended or sold independently.   

This particular lot of coffee comes from a selection of 13 farmers in the Agua Dule municipality, part of the district of Huabal, in the mountains northwest of the region’s main trading city of Jaén. Combined, the 13 farms have 25 hectares of coffee, just under 2 hectares apiece, which is average in size for Peru’s northern farms.   

The farmers all follow largely the same picking and processing standards, despite having slight differences in variety, machinery, or microclimate, which changes the family protocols for each farm. All farms pick very selectively into the evening and float cherry for density, and to remove unwanted debris. The coffee fruit is then depulped and fermented in tanks or in bags, depending on the size of the batch, and takes anywhere from 12-24 hours depending on the current temperature patterns. Fermented parchment is washed with clean water and dried on raised screens, tables, or small solar dryers with clear plastic domes.  

Variety resilience is key to quality in the group’s mind: unlike many of their farming peers elsewhere who have replaced less resistant varieties with regional catimors, parts of northern Cajamarca have managed to minimize the encroachment of catimor genetics by rigorously maintaining their farms. This keeps heirloom bourbons and other delicate varieties thriving. Coffees from this area, big or small in volume, have a generally high quality baseline, not to mention incredible potential: Peru’s Cup of Excellence top scores are regularly from this area.  

This highly focused regional blend come to us from Origin Coffee Lab, an exemplary alliance recently established in Peru’s competitive north. The small team put together by José Rivera and Alex Julca--career cuppers, farmers, exporters, and quality managers who grew up in Peru’s sought-after northern coffee terroir--is quickly gaining a reputation for their outstanding portfolio of microlot coffees and above-expectations regional blends. Which should be no surprise, given the founders have decades of experience working with farmers of all kinds and cupping thousands of samples from across the Cajamarca region. So, they know what they’re aiming for. Origin Coffee Lab uses their extensive experience to set high standards for farms, with generous price premiums in place for those who rise to the occasion. But it’s not simply a take-it-or-leave-it proposition: their “Solidario” program is a curriculum that teaches best practices in farm management and processing to help small farmers maximize their quality, and profit. Farmers in northern Cajamarca province, which includes districts like Chirinos, San Ignacio, and Huabal, all famous for great coffee, certainly have their choice of exporter. So the growing partnerships for Origin Coffee Lab and the popularity of their coffees signal that they clearly are offering something worthwhile to top farmers. Not only do they compensate their farmers very well, they also provide complete price transparency to their buyers. Agua Dulce producers earned an average equivalent of $2.87/lb for green, exportable coffee.