MEXICO FTO ALTOS DE CHIAPAS SHG EP

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Flavor Profile Apple, caramel, peanut butter, juicy, complex

Out of stock

About this coffee

Grower

172 producers organized around Enjambre Cafetalero

Altitude

1100 – 1800 masl

Variety

Bourbon, Catuai, Catimor, Caturra, Pacamara, and Typica

Soil

Clay minerals

Region

Amatenango de la Frontera, Chiapas, Mexico

Process

Fully washed and dried in the sun

Harvest

October – March

Certification

Organic | Fair Trade

Coffee Background

Everest in Chiapas comes to mind when looking for words to describe organic certified coffees from Chiapas.  And even though Chiapas has coffee production reaching an impressive 1800 meters above sea level near the El Triunfo biosphere reserve, we're not talking about elevation when we say Everest.  Rather, the reference is to the level of difficulty in cultivating heirloom varieties using organic practices despite the devastating toll of leaf rust throughout Mexico. Getting our hands on some of the best coffee from Chiapas Is no accident. Rather, results come from a complex and meaningful supply chain.  At the top, organizations like Impacto Transformador and Sinapsis look to create solutions, like access to credit and international markets, for thousands of coffee farmers who struggle to make a living wage with just a few acres of land for coffee production.  Throughout dozens communities in the southern end of the Sierra Madre mountain range, each producer processes coffee with their own micro-mill and dry the coffee in the sun on patios before transporting the coffee in parchment to a centrally located dry mill facility where the coffee is prepared for export. With smaller farms, production of organic compost is an achievable and cost effective means of maintaining proper plant nutrition.  These organic practices also  provide a protective buffer for precious plant  and bird species that make their home in biosphere reserves like  Montes Azules and El Triunfo.  This particular lot comes from a collaboration between Impacto Transformador and a community based cooperative called Enjambre Cafetalero, which has 172 members cultivating coffee near the border of Guatemala in a municipality called Amatenango de la Frontera.  The collaboration has helped provide logistical support for transporting and preparing coffee for export, and is also helping farmers with technical support for achieving improved farm management practices and navigating the organic certification process.