

Colombia
QUALITY SCORE: 87.50
Cup Notes
Brown Sugar / Guava / Honey / Cocoa
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*
Villamarìa is the drying station in Chinchinà, a municipality located in the department of Caldas in Colombia. Chinchiná, boasting beautiful landscapes, is situated in a valley surrounded by coffee plantations in the Central Cordillera, to the east of which an active volcano lies.
The station currently receives harvests of 30 coffee producers in the surrounding Villarazo, Jamaica, located at higher altitudes than the drying station itself. As Villamarìa sits at a lower altitude, it is better suited for the processing of honey and natural coffees due since the temperature here is higher.
When the coffee reaches relative humidity of 15-20%, the drying is completed in a mechanical dehydrator with consistent control of the temperature and humidity. This method helps create a clean and sweet cup thanks to the control of as many variables of the drying process as possible, namely humidity and temperature.
SUGAR CANE DECAFFEINATION PROCESS:
Sugar cane decaffeination is often referred to as a natural decaffeination process. Ethyl acetate, used in the process, is a compound found in the nature (C4H8O2). It is most often encountered as a by-product of fruit fermentation, while it is also present in both ripe bananas and beer, just to name a few.
The facility in Colombia, where this lot undergoes decaffeination process, uses water from the Navado el Ruis (a volcano between Caldas and Tolima) and natural ethyl acetate from fermented sugarcane, sourced in the southern region of Palmira, Colombia.
The process begins with steaming of the coffee to increase its porosity, which also starts the hydrolysis of caffeine usually bonded with salts and chlorogenic acid in the bean. The beans are then submerged in an ethyl acetate solvent, until 97% of the caffeine is removed. There is then a final steaming, used to lift residual traces of the organic compound.
Dry process seems simple: pick the fruit, lay it out in the sun until it turns from red to brown to near-black, and then hull off the thick, dried outer layer in one step to reveal the green bean. It is a method suited to arid regions, where the sun and heat can dry the seed inside the intact fruit skin.
It's often referred to as "natural coffee" because of its simplicity, and because the fruit remains intact and undisturbed, a bit like drying grapes into raisins. Since it requires minimal investment, the dry process method is a default to create cheap commodity-grade coffee in areas that have the right climate capable of drying the fruit and seed.
But it’s a fail in humid or wet regions. If the drying isn't progressing fast enough, the fruit degrades, rots or gets covered with mould.
Dry-processed coffees can also be wildly inconsistent. If you want a cleanly-fruited, sweet, intense cup, dry process (DP) takes more hand labor than wet process. Even the most careful pickers will take green unripe or semi-ripe coffee off the branch as they pick red, ripe cherry. If these are not removed in the first days of drying, the green turns to brown that is hard to distinguish from the ripe fruit.