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Sudan Rume Natural Pomegranate / Vanilla / Herbal

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In The Cup

This naturally processed Sudan Rume from our friends at Café Granja la Esperanza is bursting with sweetness and has loads going on! It has a bright and refreshin...

Origin
Colombia
Estate
Café Granja La Esperanza
Farm
Las Margaritas
Varietal
Sudan Rume
Process
Natural
Altitude
1,570 - 1,850 masl

In The Cup

This naturally processed Sudan Rume from our friends at Café Granja la Esperanza is bursting with sweetness and has loads going on! It has a bright and refreshing pomegranate-like acidity, the body is thick but silky with complex vanilla and tropical fruit notes and a herbal aroma.

The Story

After taking over the family farm, dating back to the 1930s, Rigoberto and Luis decided to take their coffee in a new direction when they began growing organic coffee in the 90's. They soon acquired another farm, La Esperanza to keep up with organic production and in 2007 Rigoberto leased a farm in Panama called La Carleida. Here he won first prize for "Best Coffee in Panama" for a Geisha varietal, the seeds of which were brought back to Colombia starting a new era for coffee at Cafe Granja La Esperanza. Five farms now make up the Estate; Potosi, La Esperanza, Hawaii, Cerro Azul and Las Margaritas, growing competition winning coffees where varietals are matched with processes to create unique flavour profiles. We have been proud to work with Rigoberto and his team since 2014 and over the last 9 years we have been delighted to showcase many of their exiting coffees. This is a great example of the long term relationships that we aim to build with all of our partners at origin.

Social and Environmental

Granja la Esperanza is a well-known producer in the world of speciality coffee due to the wide range of super high-end coffees that they produce. However, they have also shared their success with their local community in many ways. During harvest time, Café Granja look after their pickers by paying them by time not by weight and they also provide free meals and even a place to stay in their ‘barracks’. As well as looking after their own team of workers, they also help out several cooperatives in neighbouring regions by working alongside the farmers and in the washing stations to improve the cup quality so they can earn higher prices for their coffees.
As early adopters of organic production back in the 90’s, it’s clear that Rigoberto and his team have a huge respect for their land and ecosystem. All of their coffee plants are densely intercropped with a variety of other plants from shrubs to tall canopy trees including banana, guava, cacao, guanabana and many more. Not only does this help reduce the spread of pests like Broca but it also encourages birds and wildlife which in turn help by eating the Broca.

The Variety

Sudan Rume is an ancient landrace variety that was discovered in South Sudan’s Boma Plateau, near the border with Ethiopia, where it is likely to have grown wild for thousands of years. The cup profile of Sudan Rume is very high quality with high sweetness, floral notes and complex herbal notes giving it a very unique character. Although the cup quality is very high, Sudan Rume has a low yield, making it a rare choice for farmers to produce. For this reason, it is sometimes used by plant breeders to add cup quality to hybrids. The most well-known hybrid that derives from Sudan Rume is probably SL28 which is found in many Kenyan coffees.

The Process

Harvesting is done by hand by pickers that receive thorough training to ensure they only pick cherries at the correct ripeness. After this, cherries are sorted by being floated in small tanks where the floating cherries are scooped up and separated. The cherries that sink are the correct ripeness. After this, cherries are fermented in special barrels with controlled temperature for 36 hours with no water. The barrels are closed but not sealed in order to allow an aerobic fermentation. After fermentation, the coffee cherries are left for 48 hours in mechanical dryers and then pass to solar dryers for 28 days depending on the weather until the dry cherries reach a moisture level of 11 to 12%.

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