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FINCA PORVENIR CATURRA WASHED, COLOMBIA

FINCA PORVENIR CATURRA WASHED, COLOMBIA

green tea, winey acidity, mild candy-like sweetness

Region: Palestina, Huila
Producer: Sandre Milena Mora
Farm: Finca Porvenir
Variety:
Caturra
Process: Washed
Altitude: 1550-1700masl
Harvest: 
2024/2025
Supplier: Cafe Imports




Espresso/Brew 

PRODUCT CODE : CATURRA

250gr wholebean :

735.00

1kg whole bean :

2840.00
DETAY
region-icon
Palestina, Huila
farm-icon
Sandre Milena Mora
variety-icon
caturra
process-icon
Washed
altitude-icon
1550-1700masl
harvest-icon
2024/25

Notes Of A Roaster From The Underground:green tea, winey acidity, mild candy-like sweetness

omniroast     Omni-roast (Espresso/Brew)

 

 

FINCA PORVENIR CATURRA, COLOMBIA

 

Sandra Milena Mora owns and operates the Farm El Porvenir in Palestina in the Huila region. This 9-hectare farm has 6 hectares planted with around 19,000 coffee trees. The farm also grows corn, cassava, and bananas. Fly crop takes place from June to August with the main harvest happening from November through
January. The coffee is harvested, selecting only ripe cherries. They are then taken to a water tub to clean the cherry and are added to Grainpro bags where the cherry is left to ferment for 36 hours. Afterward, the cherries are pulped and left in ceramic tanks with water to further ferment for 60 hours. The coffee is then washed and put in bags for 12 hours to be taken to the drying stretchers. The same fermentation process is completed for all batches.

Program: Variety Select

Sandra Milena Mora - Finca El Porvenir - San Isidro - Palestina - Huila - Caturra - Washed

Variety Select lots comprise coffees of a single noteworthy variety, sourced either from an individual farm or from several farms and blended together. These lots are designed to highlight the flavor potential that is inherent in particular coffee varieties, and are the result of great care and attention to detail on the producer's part. These coffees are microlot-level quality and come with a high degree of traceability.

 

kolombiya-header

 

History

Coffee came to Colombia in the late 1700s by way of Jesuit priests who were among the Spanish colonists, and the first plantings were in the north of the country, in the Santander and Boyaca departments. Throughout the 19th century, coffee plants spread through the country, with a smaller average farm size than more commonly found throughout other Latin American producing countries.

Commercial production and export of coffee started in the first decade of the 1800s, but remained somewhat limited until the 20th century: The 1927 establishment of the Federación Nacional de Cafeteros de Colombia (aka FNC, see below) was a tremendous boost to the national coffee industry, and Colombia quickly established itself as a major coffee-growing region, vying with Brazil and Vietnam for the title of top global producer.

Colombia still produces exclusively Arabica coffee, and though the country suffered setbacks and lower yields from an outbreak of coffee-leaf rust in the early 2010s, production has fairly bounced back thanks to the development and spread of disease-resistant plants, as well as aggressive treatment and preventative techniques.


colombia-map

 

Regionality

 

Colombia’s size alone certainly contributes to the different profiles that its 20 coffee-growing departments (out of a total 32) express in the cup, but even within growing regions there are plentiful variations due to the microclimates created by mountainous terrain, wind patterns, proximity to the Equator, and, of course, differences in varieties and processing techniques.

The country’s northern regions (e.g. Santa Marta and Santander) with their higher temperatures and lower altitudes, offer full-bodied coffees with less brightness and snap; the central “coffee belt” of Antioquia, Caldas, and Quindio among others, where the bulk of the country’s production lies, produce those easy-drinking “breakfast blend” types, with soft nuttiness and big sweetness but low acidity. The southwestern departments of Nariño, Cauca, and Huila tend to have higher altitude farms, which comes through in more complex acidity and heightened florality in the profiles.

To capitalize on this broad spectrum of flavors and to emphasize the diversity available to roasters and consumers from within a single country, the coffee growers’ association has begun to provide origin distinctions, and has developed aggressive marketing campaigns designed to boost the regions’ signals to buyers worldwide.

 

FINCA PORVENIR CATURRA WASHED, COLOMBIA
FINCA PORVENIR CATURRA WASHED, COLOMBIA
FINCA PORVENIR CATURRA WASHED, COLOMBIA

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