Wubanchi (Ethiopia) - 250g
  • Wubanchi (Ethiopia) - 250g
  • Wubanchi (Ethiopia) - product

Ethiopia

Wubanchi

Competition Series
QUALITY SCORE: 90.00

Cup Notes
Elder Flower / Raspberry / Sherbet / Orange / Rose / Pear
Suggested for espresso and filter


when we roast

We freshly roast to order all coffees on Monday, Wednesday and Friday (excluding national holidays), and ship the same day! Cut-off time is 11:59pm (UTC+1) of the day before the roast day. *We only ship whole beans*

Details

Quality Score
90.00
Series
Competition
Producer
Several small farmers
Country
Ethiopia
Terroir
Guji
Altitude
1800 - 2100 masl
Process
Special
Arabica cultivar
Ethiopian heirlooms
Picked in
January 2022
Arrived in
October 2022
Shipped in
Jute + GrainPro
Roast profile by
Rubens Gardelli
Roasted on
Customised solid-drum roaster

Suggested brewing recipe

To help you make the best out of your coffee, Rubens has crafted recipes for brewing this particular lot in filter.

There are two recipes: one for conical brewer (think v60) and one for flat-bottom brewer (think Kalita), however you can surely brew our coffees with any other brewing device, such as immersion brewers.

Please remember that these recipes are intended as starting points and may require further adjustments if the equipment you use is not identical to the one in the recipe; the characteristics of water used can also make a big difference in brewing.

Finally, the recipes suited specifically to Rubens’ roasting style, hence we do not guarantee that they will work as a universal reference.

Have fun brewing!

V60 STYLE
Coffee:
17g
Grind:
Comandante 20 clicks (medium)
Water:
250g (40 tds) at 90°C
Time:
2:35
Brew strenght:
1,40 tds
FLATBED
Coffee:
17g
Grind:
Comandante 15 clicks (medium)
Water:
250g (40 tds) at 90°C
Time:
2:40
Brew strenght:
1,50

THE STORY BEHIND

Guji Wubanchi station is a cherry-processing facility in Mesina, Guji zone. This region borders the now famous Yirgacheffe district, the coffees from which have dominated specialty production for a number of years. The combination of high altitude, fertile soil, consistent and plentiful rains, and an abundance of local knowledge are all contributing factors to the high status of Yirgacheffe coffees. The station is situated at 1,980 masl and processes cherries from hundreds of local smallholder farmers.
‘Supernatural’ is their processing method which augments the traditional natural sun-drying process by creating the environment for controlled aerobic fermentation in the drying phase.

THE VARIETY

Ethiopian heirlooms, why the generic name? It's estimated that there are somewhere in-between six and ten thousand coffee varietals in Ethiopia. And due to this colossal figure, there hasn’t been the genetic testing to allow buyers to distinguish the varietal. With the cross pollination that naturally happens in the wild, the name ‘Ethiopian Heirloom’ exists as a catch-all phrase to describe this happenstance. However, that really makes Ethiopian quite a mystery – and an interesting mystery as each village or town could potentially have a different varietal which could carry very unique properties.

THE FERMENTATION PROCESS

In traditional Ethiopian specialty natural processing, cherries are spread in a thin layer on a raised bed and dried in indirect or direct sunlight. For supernatural, cherries are spread in a thicker layer on racks in a semi-permeable box, restricting access to sunlight while allowing limited airflow and oxygenation. This prolongs the overall drying time and increases the natural fermentation of the latent sugars in the cherries over the course of the drying period.
 
In order to ensure consistency, prevent over-fermentation, and avoid mould formation, it is essential that the conditions are strictly monitored throughout the drying/fermentation process. Temperature, Brix (the measure of sugar content in cherries) and moisture readings are recorded periodically and small adjustments to airflow and ambient temperature are made accordingly.
 
Once the optimum moisture content has been reached (around 12.5%) the cherries are rested in a cool environment prior to secondary processing - hulling, grading, sorting, handpicking and bagging in Grainpro for export.

MORE INFO

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