Green Coffee Offerings : South America: Peru


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We're working on building new relationships in Peru. Our first container has arrived and we're excited about the coffees we'll have to offer.


Organic Peru ... you can get it anywhere now. It is usually the cheapest certified Organic coffee on the market, it's the "blender" coffee of Organics, it's $4/Lb. roasted at Trader Joes. And it is threatening to lower prices for organic coffee farmers globally. The Peruvian coffee industry took note of the premium prices paid for Organic coffee, and realized they could produce Organic for less cost, focusing on quantity, not quality. They wanted to be to Organic coffee what Vietnam is to robusta. There are stories of forest being clear-cut for organic farm (it takes 3 years for an existing farm to become certified organic... not so with a "new" farm. I doubt the image of cutting forest to grow organic product is an image consumers have in mind ... then again, it's Organic and it's $4 per lb. roasted. Well, you get what you pay for. The problem is, the Peruvian organic coffee glut forces quality-oriented farmers within Peru and everywhere else too to accept lower prices for their crop in order to compete. And a farm that is trying to produce a truly excellent coffee in a conscientious way cannot compete with a larger quantity-oriented farm, whether its a co-op or not. Cup a Trader Joe's organic Peru versus a high quality Organic Peru and the differences are profound: not only do the cheap ones have little to no positive qualities, they also have defective taints in the cup, grassy, fermenty notes in particular.

Okay, I am a little cynical about Peruvian coffee. It's not because there aren't good lots though. They do exist and it takes some detective work to find them. After all, Peru is a hugely varied land and they produce a lot of different coffees. It's the land of the Incas and by most measures a latecomer in the modern world coffee trade. Peruvian offerings are hardly mentioned in William Ukers 1936 edition of All About Coffee and have not been well thought of due to an indelicate, blunted acidity that doesn't have the refinement of the Centrals. I think a lot of this is historical bias because Peru can produce some very fine coffees. In general, these coffees have Central American brightness but in a South American coffee flavor package overall. The good organic lots do have more of a "rustic" coffee character. As long as it is kept in check and does not dominate the cup, this can add interest to the flavor rather than detract. The cup has it all, body, brightness and good depth in the flavors. While there are still mediocre arrivals, it doesn't take much cupping to find a really good one. The Chanchamayo is usually (but not necessarily) the top region, but good Norte and Cuzco from the south are out there. Buy the first Peru you are offered and you are bound for cup troubles. Poorly processed coffee, coffee with defects, might fool the cupper at first, but 2 months down the line the coffee fades, the acidity fails, baggy flavors emerge, and you know you made a bad decision. It's a lot of work to find a good lot among the abundance offered by brokers and other channels, and it takes slogging through a lot of samples to find them though. But hey, it's better slogging through samples at a cupping table than stacks of paper at a desk!

I have been to Peru a few times - here is the travelog from my first visit in 2006, and then when I acted as head judge of regional competition in 2008. I went to visit the Capacy Co-Op in Peru in Sept. 09. See the travelogue page for all trip listings.


Quechua herders I encountered on the road from Cuzco to Quillabamba


Big Typica varietal coffee cherry, the cultivar used most in Peru


The coffee "A-Frame" which helps small-scale farmers chose correct coffee plant spacing and calculate land slope!


Peru has too much altitude! It is one of the few places I have visited where you fly in and then drive down to the coffee. But that is the case when you fly into to Cusco in the interior of the country.

Tomas Ovalle and I look at his coffee cherry on his farm in Canelon Peru.

Our Unroasted Peruvian Coffee Offerings:

Please refer to our Reference Page for definitions of terms and cupping numbers used below Check out the Sweet Maria's Coffee Home Roasting Forum for more conversation about home roasting this and other coffees.

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Peru Organic Lot #86
$6.50$12.35$28.28Limit 5 pounds
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This Lot #86 is one that we constructed here in the lab from 8 total producers in the Puno region. The farms in this area are some of the highest we deal with peaking at over 2000 masl. Crops are mostly planted in Typica, but with a small amount of Caturra and Catimor intermixed. These farms are small in their own right, and downright miniscule in comparison to the farm giants that dominate Central America. Most in the region are no larger than 2 hectares, which makes it easy (and not to mention sensible) to do all the processing in-house. Manual cranked depulpers are the preferred method of removing the cherry skin. One small tank is used for both fermentation and washing, and then the parchment is patio-dried. Puno is one of the crown jewels of the coffee world, of which this lot truly represents.

Peru Puno lot #86 is a coffee driven by its sweetness. Ripe red fruits like currants and raspberry as well as darker blueberry and walnut perfume the fragrance of the dry grounds. Blackberry and fresh cream lept out in the break after an intense dark sugar sweetness wafting the crust before it. It was so sweet it reminded me of blackberry syrup. This is a coffee that will disappear in a darker roast. The malic juiciness and brown sugar sweetness did really well at the City level. Although still pleasant, Puno Lot #86 turns almost unilaterally into bittersweet cacao at the City + level. The finish on all of the Puno lots have been reminiscent of creamy hot chocolate and this coffee is no exception.





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Laying out parchment, Puno.
Country: Peru
Grade: SHB EP
Region: Puno
Processing: Wet Process (Washed)
Arrival Date: January 2013 arrival
Appearance: .0 d/300gr, 15+ screen
Varietal: Typica
Intensity/Prime Attribute: Medium Intensity / Balance and sweet, approachable flavor.
Roast: City to City+. This lot won't hold so well at dark roast profiles.
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