Sumatra Wet Hulled Aceh Pak Eki

Regular price $9.85
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Intense rustic flavors, inky body, dark bittersweetness is a central feature, low acidity, earth-toned aroma, accents of molasses, tobacco, peat, baking cocoa, aromatic wood. City+ to French. Good for espresso.

Total Score: 86.5
Product Overview
Full Cupping Notes

The ground coffee has very nice Wet Hulled characteristics of rustic sweetness, with intense herbal notes, and a hint of cedar shakes. Pouring hot water on the grounds pulls out bittersweet notes, leafy tobacco, and something like black pepper (specifically "pepper cask" coffee, if you've ever tried it). The cup highlights rustic sweetness and intense earth-toned aromatics. The sweetness brought out flavors of molasses, rustic palm sugar, with woodsy earth notes of tobacco, peat, and aromatic wood in the aftertaste. Bittersweetness is a central feature too, countering the rustic character to some degree. Dark roasts should be quite useful as an espresso blend component, bringing body, bittersweetness, and complex earthy accents. Best with at least 48 hours rest off-roast.

COFFEE DETAILS
process methodWet Hulled (Giling Basah)
cultivarModern Hybrids
farm gateNo
Farm Notes

Origin & Farm Notes

Sumatra coffees are a grand exception in many ways. We would not accept the earthy tones, the low acidity, or other exotic and rustic flavors from other origins, especially in wet-processed coffees. But in Sumatra coffee, flavors seen as defect from other origins can be positive attributes! The unique flavors are due to the influence of the coffee varieties, the climate, and, last but not at all least, the processing method we call "Wet Hull" (or Giling Basah to locals - read more about that process here). Here's an overview of the processing difference: Traditional Sumatras are from small-holder farms, where they process the coffee by pulping off the skin in a hand-crank machine, then ferment the coffee in buckets of water or small concrete tanks to break down the fruity mucilage layer. This is not so different from wet-processing, but by the time they leave it to ferment may or may not be enough to remove all the fruit, and they don't wait for the coffee to dry. Basically it is traded to collectors, middlemen, while the coffee has high humidity. When sold to the mill, it might be dried a little more, but it is hulled out of the parchment skin wet; hence the term Wet Hulled. The fact that the green coffee is then laid out to dry on patios without its protective parchment layer is quite different than wet-processing, where the coffee is dried in the parchment. And it's also where a lot of Sumatra coffee is ruined, since it can absorb taints from the environment. This is a particular lot we really liked for it's rustic sweetness and earth-toned aroma. It's from a collector named Pak Eki who buys coffee in the broader Aceh Tengah region, from tens of farmers in neighboring villages. The coffee is sorted with machinery and by hand to remove the worst defects. It's still far from perfect, you should expect some bug holes, broken beans, and the like, which is totally normal for Sumatra.

Specs

Technical Specifications

Key specifications and operating details for this product.

region Aceh Tengah
processing Wet Hulled (Giling Basah)
drying method Patio Sun-Dried
arrival date Nov 2025
lot size 30
bag size 60 KG
packaging GrainPro Liner
farm gate No
cultivar detail Ateng, Djember, Gayo
grade Grade 1
appearance 1+ d/300gr, 15-18 screen - expect some broca damage, split beans, quakers...typical of Sumatran coffee
roast recommendations City+ to French
recommended espresso Yes
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