Guduba Wet Mill BENTI NENKA ETHIOPIAN LANDRACE - WASHED Ethiopia
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Guduba Wet Mill BENTI NENKA ETHIOPIAN LANDRACE - WASHED Ethiopia

This is our second year purchasing coffee from this washing station under the watchful eyes of Eyasu Worasa. This coffee is exceptionally clean with bergamot acidity, excellent complexity of fruits—ripe peach, star fruit, and melon—and a long vanilla finish.

NO LONGER AVAILABLE
VARIETAL

Ethiopian Landrace

REGION

Hambela Wamena, Guji

ALTITUDE

1,925 - 2,110 masl

HARVEST

October, 2020

PROCESSING

Harvested at peak ripeness. Floated. Depulped. Wet fermented for 36-48 hours. Dried on raised beds for 10-14 days.

ABOUT BENTI NENKA

This is our second year working with the Guduba wet mill. This washing station is located in the village of Benti Nenka in Hambela Wamena woreda, Guji. The quality of this year’s selection is staggering, and we're very much looking forward to working with this coffee and continue seeing how the output of this washing station progresses. 589 smallholding producers delivered their cherry to the mill this season. On average, each producer has between 1-2 hectares (2-5 acres) of land. This mill is owned and operated by Eyasu Worasa, a native of the region who has been working in the coffee milling industry for 11 years.

ABOUT ETHIOPIAN LANDRACE

Ethiopia is widely acknowledged as where coffee originated, and its production continues to represent about 10% of the country’s gross domestic product. DNA testing has confirmed over 60 distinct varieties growing in Ethiopia, making it home to the most coffee biodiversity of any region in the world. Given the tradition of coffee production in Ethiopia and the political interworkings of the Ethiopian coffee trade, it is virtually impossible to get single variety coffee lots from Ethiopia. This is changing, albeit very slowly. Most Ethiopian coffees are blends of the many Ethiopian varieties, and referred to simply as 'Ethiopian Landrace'.

Pricing Details

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FOT

$10.19/KG

The cost of getting a coffee from cherry to beverage varies enormously depending on its place of origin and the location of its consumption. The inclusion of price transparency is a starting point to inform broader conversation around the true costs of production and the sustainability of specialty coffee as a whole.