Ethiopia is the birthplace of coffee. Yirgacheffe lots are prized for jasmine-like aromatics, bergamot tea quality, and an almost crystalline acidity. Cherries …
Huila sits in the southern Colombian Andes, a tapestry of small farms tracing volcanic slopes. The microclimate produces classic sweet-balanced cups: panela sug…
Kenyan coffee carries one of the most recognisable cup signatures in the world: blackcurrant, grapefruit, and a glassy phosphoric acidity. Nyeri sits between Mo…
Three volcanoes ring Antigua valley, dusting the soil with mineral ash. The classic profile is full-bodied with dark chocolate, hazelnut, and a soft orange-zest…
The Cerrado plateau yields sun-dried naturals with heavy body, low acidity, and dessert-like sweetness — peanut, milk chocolate, and dried fig. The backbone of …
Sumatran giling basah (wet-hulled) coffees are unmistakable: earthy, syrupy body, cedar and tobacco notes, a finish that lingers like dark cocoa. The honey-proc…