High intensity coffee, thick-bodied, with flavor characteristics of rustic cocoa, fermented fruits, and earth-toned aroma. Notes of aromatic wood, poached pear, cider vinegar, raw cacao. City+ to Full City.
While there's potent bittersweetness in the dry fragrance, it's the fruit scents that we keyed in on. It has a strong wine-like smell that reminded me of fermented fruits. Aromatically speaking, the bittersweet/fermentation aspects smell intense in the wet grounds, hinting at chocolate liqueur, and cooked banana with chocolate sauce. Brewed, this is a high intensity coffee, thick-bodied with flavor characteristics of rustic cocoa, fermented fruits, and earth-toned aroma. City+ roasts have notes of poached pear and canned peach, with an acetic hint of apple cider vinegar. The flavors of fruits are backed by dark bittersweet tones, profiles of raw cacao, and the intense bittering of roasted cocoa nibs. The aroma has a savory touch of puffed rice cereal, with a hint of aromatic wood in the aftertaste.
The 120 manzana Finca Miravalles is a family affair. It's owned by husband and wife Luis Duarte and Tete Chacón, and much of the management is handled by their son, Luis Jr, and Chico, the on-site manager of 15 years. The farm is located in Apaneca, Ahuachapan, not too far from the Santa Ana volcano. It used to be two separate farms, Miravalles belonging to Tete's family, Santa Maria to Luis's. They were both raised on these neighboring farms, family ownership going back some 150 years. Sometime after marrying, they put in an offer on Miravalles, which was all but abandoned at the time, and joined with Santa Maria under the Miravalles name. They have been renovating the farm ever since, keeping much of the original Bourbon and Pacas cultivars, and the list of new varieties planted grows each year. They've done an amazing job segregating the cultivars in separate plots, and go to great lenghts to harvest and process separately too. This year we bought several of the varietal separations, this being an Anacafe 14 lot (natural cross of Timor Hybrid and Pacamara). It's also a dry process coffee, which in general terms means they dry the whole coffee cherries with the seeds inside, rather than removing first. There's an additional step to the dry process method at Miravalles, which first involves sealing up in plastic barrels for 3 days during which the cherries ferment. Then they pour the cherries onto raised beds where they dry for around 2 weeks. The resulting cup is quite fruit forward, big bodied, and with fairly low level of acidity. Miravalles is perched on the verdant slopes of the Apaneca-Ilamatepec mountain region, and spans an altitude range of about 1250 to 1550 meters above sea level. Check out our video tour of the Miravalles farm, and in-depth look at their wet process method in action at their mill.
| Region | Apaneca, Ahuachapan |
|---|---|
| Processing | Dry Process (Natural) |
| Drying Method | Raised Bed Sun-Dried |
| Arrival date | July 2025 Arrival |
| Lot size | 19 |
| Bag size | 69 KG |
| Packaging | GrainPro Liner |
| Farm Gate | Yes |
| Cultivar Detail | Anacafe 14 |
| Grade | SHG EP |
| Appearance | .8 d/300gr, 15+ Screen - uneven coloring, some insect damage - see photo |
| Roast Recommendations | City+ to Full City |
| Type | Farm Gate |