This is an absolutely banging decaf. Body and sweetness and sugar for days... We're absolutely loving it, and drinking the heck out of it. Notes of Golden Syrup, Cherry Coke, and 70% Chocolate. We're having a few transport issues on our staple decaf from El Carmen, and this one from our long-term partners at Ally Coffee is perfectly filling the gap until it returns.
The town of Buesaco lies high on a ridge in the Andes Mountains in the Nariño department of Colombia. Promotora Cafe de Altura has its offices, cupping lab, and warehouses there, where the co-op collects coffees from smallholders whose farms are tucked into the slopes surrounding the town. The cooperative works with more than 300 smallholder farmers all over the Nariño department who generally harvest coffee all year round. At the co-op’s facilities, lots are analyzed and purchased, and the farmers are paid premiums on top of the market price. These premiums incentivize high quality standards and good agricultural practices, like avoiding the usage of glyphosate and other chemicals.
Promotora Cafe de Altura cups coffees throughout harvest delivery to build lots that are uniform and consistent in bean size and cup profile. This lot of decaffeinated coffee in particular consists of small batches of beans from farms around the Galeras Volcano. This coffee was decaffeinated using the Ethyl Acetate (EA) decaffeination process.
Ethyl acetate is produced by esterification between ethyl alcohol, which is derived from the fermentation of sugar cane, and acetic acid. The green coffee is submerged in a wash of water and ethyl acetate, during which the ethyl acetate bonds with the caffeine in the coffee and begins to extract it from the green seeds. The EA solution is flushed and the process is repeated until reaching a minimum decaffeination level of 97%. Finally, the green coffee is steamed to remove any remaining ethyl acetate from the seeds.
Elevation: 1850 Meters Above Sea Level
Varietal: Caturra, Colombia, Castillo
Cup score: 83
Price paid per kg: £6.25
Process: Ethyl Acetate (sugar-cane) processed decaf