This wet process coffee makes a fantastic pour-over at City roast level, fragrant florals, delicate tea-like flavors, high toned accents, hints of fruit, and syrupy sweetness that carried the cup. City to City+. Dark roasts make nice Ethiopian espresso.
Light roasts of this wet process coffee brew a clean, floral profile that's syrupy sweet, accented by hints of fruit and tea that bring a mouth refreshing quality to the acidic impression. The ground coffee releases refined sweetness in the fragrance, like simple syrup made with sugar in the raw, with a very light floral note, and a hint of lemon peel. The wet aroma brings the floral aspects closer to the surface, perfumed jasmine, orange blossoms, sweet and delicate, along with lively citrus hints. Light City roasts of Hechere make fantastic pour-over brews, where fragrant floral notes and delicate tea-like flavors come together with high toned accents, and sweetness that carries the cup. There's a light honey flavor in the brew that hooks you right up front, and shifts to something more like burnt sugars in the aftertaste. Aromatic top notes are present from start to finish too, initially centered around floral hints of jasmine and rose, then shifting to citrusy lemon verbena, and finally something like botanical tea bitters in the aftertaste. I picked up on fruited suggestions of pear and white peach as the coffee cooled, along with a bubblegum note. Hechere shines at City roast level, which on my Roest was around 6:30 1st Crack, followed by 1:25 development time (totaling 12.5% moisture loss). Just for fun, I roasted one batch to Full City+ too, and was surprised at the flavors it produced as espresso! It's not the thickest bodied shot, but still feels supportive to a unique profile of jasmine laced chocolates, cooked berries, and moderately bright citrus. This isn't an espresso for milk drinks, but one to be enjoyed on its own.
Hechere is the name of the buying site and farm area this coffee is from. It's located in the Oda Muda Kebele, not far from Gerba town in Guji, and the farms span an altitude range of 2,200 to 2,350 meters above sea level. This lot was processed at a mill in Gerba dogo area, run by Gemechu Shonora, along with brothers Shebura, Morkata and Adugna. Their father worked for the local union many years ago as a coffee collector, going out into the surrounding towns buying coffee cherries from farmers. They produce both wet and dry process coffee from many of the surrounding areas, separating by growing region, and Kebele (equivalent of a small town). The coffee is pulped of its fruit with a disc machine that uses friction to remove the fruit, then fermented overnight in cement tanks. Fermentation is mostly a means to an end, that being to break down and remove the fruit mucilage that's stuck to the seed. But it also tends to yield a much more refined cup profile than dry process, often floral and bright in the case of coffees from Guji. The wet coffee is laid to dry on raised beds in full sun here, and it's not uncommon to see coffee dry in less than a week. We found the cup expressed aromatic florals and syrupy sweetness. The coffee beans are also on the small side, likely down to 14 screen. Thankfully they're not so small that you need to worry about roasting in your Behmor. We tested 200 grams of coffee, and didn't see any coffee slip through the grid drum.
| Region | Oda Muda, Gerba, Guji Zone |
|---|---|
| Processing | Wet Process (Washed) |
| Drying Method | Raised Bed Sun-Dried |
| Arrival date | October 2025 Arrival |
| Lot size | 100 |
| Bag size | 60 KG |
| Packaging | GrainPro Liner |
| Farm Gate | Yes |
| Cultivar Detail | Heirloom Varieties |
| Grade | Grade 1 |
| Appearance | .2 d/300gr, 14 Screen - there are small beans in this lot (see Farm Notes) |
| Roast Recommendations | City to City+ for brew, Full City for a bright SO espresso |
| Type | Farm Gate |
| Recommended for Espresso | Yes |