Fruits are a big part of this dry process profile, thought it's bittersweet and spiced accents you're left to ponder in the finish. Hints of jellied cranberry, mango tea, high % dark chocolate, coriander. City to Full City+. Good for espresso.
Grinding a City roast brought a potent sweetness of caramel and unrefined sugars, dark berry, contrasted by a background note of cocoa. There's a scent of dark chocolate laced with raspberry in the City/City+, along with a hint of cherry that was sweet and pulpy. I picked up on a berry sauce note from the steam when pouring the hot water that smelled so nice, with layers of malted cocoa, and brown sugars behind it. All these aspects come together nicely in the brewed coffee, with delicious notes of fruits and berries playing off background bittersweet tones that fill out the middle and finish. The underlying sweetness in the hot cup had the rustic appeal of date sugar and sorghum syrup, accented by a drizzle of raspberry sauce. As the temperature dips, the profile opens up to more pulpy fruit accents like jellied cranberry sauce, blueberry preserves, along with a brisk note of mango tea. While fruits are very much a part of this dry process profile, your left pondering bittersweet flavors and spice accents in the finish, like rustic cocoa powder, high % cacao dark chocolate, and coriander. We enjoyed our light and medium roasts quite a bit, though I'm sure it will do well up to second crack. I pulled a shot of espresso with my Full City roast yielding 22 grams of espresso from 18 grams of coffee. The shot had tangy bittersweetness and fruit hints, like chocolate covered cherry, with a tart note of unripe orange, and long finish of bittering cacao nibs.
The Kinama mill is a coffee processing site in Nyabiraba Commune, not far from the Migoti washing station. In fact, they're run by the same group, headed by a man named Dan Brose, and his partner Poncien. The station is only producing dry process coffee at the moment, but they are building out their wet mill so that they can hopefully begin wet processing as well. They planned to start last year, but there was a huge fuel shortage to run their deisel generator, and there is no grid power in this part of Nyabiraba. Kinama serves the local farmers on and around "Colline" Kinama, or Kinama "Hill". It was erected in the last couple of years, partially funded with money from USAID, and a lot of help from locals. The Kinama site sits at 1650 meters above sea level, and farms at the top of the hill stretch up a little higher. We were impressed by the fruit-forward, rustic cups this dry process coffee produced, and found it to be very flexible in the roaster. Dry process coffees produce more chaff than washed, which is something to keep an eye on. Don't let it build up between roast batches, especially in roasters with open heating coils, like the Behmor.
Check out our podcast episode with Dan Brose, where we learn more about his background in coffee and growing up in Burundi.
| Region | Collines Kinama, Nyabiraba Commune |
|---|---|
| Processing | Dry Process (Natural) |
| Drying Method | Raised Bed Sun-Dried |
| Arrival date | May 2026 |
| Lot size | 33 |
| Bag size | 60 KG |
| Packaging | GrainPro Liner |
| Farm Gate | Yes |
| Cultivar Detail | Bourbon |
| Grade | A1 |
| Appearance | .4 d/300gr, 15-17 Screen |
| Roast Recommendations | City to Full City+ |
| Type | Farm Gate |
| Recommended for Espresso | Yes |