SUMATRA FT ORGANIC GARMINDO GAYO MANDHELING GRADE 1 – 30112 – SPOT RCWHSE

Position Spot

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Warehouses Oakland

Flavor Profile Cedar, molasses, almond paste, dark chocolate

Please Note This coffee landed more than 8 months ago.

Out of stock

About this coffee

Grower

Gayo Arabika Mahkota Indonesia (GARMINDO) | 548 members

Altitude

1200 – 1500 masl

Variety

Bourbon, Caturra, Catimor, Lini, Tim Tim, and Typica

Soil

Volcanic loam

Region

Bener Meriah Regency, Aceh District, Sumatra, Indonesia

Process

Wet hulled and dried in the sun

Harvest

March -July | October- January

Certification

Conventional

Coffee Background

This lot has a familiar place each year at Royal that you might not recognize. That’s because the ASKOGO cooperative has taken on a new name this year. Now the cooperative is called Gayo Arabika Mahkota Indonesia (GARMINDO).  But everything else about this coffee continues to be exactly what you have come to expect from the Bener Meriah regency of the Aceh province, a growing region acclaimed among coffee experts for its cup profiles and classic Indoniasian style of coffee cultivation and processing. The cooperative has more than 500 members with farms that average less than 3 acres in size. Producers belong to the Gayonese ethnic group and maintain a traditional village lifestyle. A large percentage of the producers are women who rely on coffee income to support their families. Each producer carefully sorts their harvested cherries before depulping and fermenting overnight with personal micro-mills. Then the coffee is washed and laid out on patios to shed the excess water from the parchment covered beans. Next the coffee takes a detour from the conventional path of processing in other origins, wherein, the coffee parchment is removed while the coffee still has a high moisture content. This wet-hulling process, called Giling Basah in the Indonesian language, leaves the coffee bean exposed while drying on patios to a moisture percentage acceptable for export. This Indonesian processing method gives the bean its unique bluish hue and the hallmark Indonesian profile. With Indonesian coffees, half the battle is overcoming logistical challenges like rugged roads and unpredictable torrents of rain. Garmindo takes on an important role of organizing local warehouses and transportation so farmers can overcome these challenges. Garmindo also collaborates with PT. Sumatera Arabika Gayo (SAG), which operates its own dry-mill in Aceh to swiftly bring the coffee to the international market, ensuring greater earnings for producers.