A lightly floral cup with refined sweetness, top notes of fruit and spice, hints of raw cane sugar, simple syrup, honey, jasmine pearl tea, apple, pear, tartaric acidity, whole cardamom and Allspice. City to City+.
After cupping several process batches of Gesha from our regular source, we built two separate lots based on flavor profile, and floral intensity. This first lot is heavily weighted in sweetness, with hints of fruit, and soft perfumed aromatics that bring out a light floral overlay. At City roast level, the dry fragrance tipped toward toasted sugars, with accents of vanilla malt, pear, and jasmine. The intensity of the sweetness sensed in this coffee increased significantly after pouring hot water on the grounds, honey accented by an unmistakable jasmine floral note, with hints of sweet spices. It's important to roast this coffee light in order to highlight the floral, aromatic aspects that make Gesha coffee unique. The brewed coffee presented a sweet backdrop of cane sugar, simple syrup, refined honey, and a floral aroma triggers a retro-nasal effect while sipping it. Jasmine pearl tea notes lend a slight perfumed element to the brew, along with a hint of orange blossom. The delicate top notes were most prominent when the coffee was still hot, fading a bit as it cools. Soft fruit tones emerge, like apple and pear, with an accent of white grape that gives the cup a nice tartaric-like acidity. Tannic tea-like notes marked the long aftertaste, and mingled with hints of whole spices, like cardamom, and Allspice.
We've been a buyer of this single estate Gesha for more than a decade, and their production has grown quite a bit through the years. This year we built two separate lots from the samples we tasted, totaling 130 bags! If you don't know the story of the Gesha cultivar, it is an old coffee type from Ethiopia that was brought to an experimental coffee garden in Costa Rica years ago as a specimen sample. It was distributed to a few farms for testing on small plots, but not much was thought of it until one of these, Esmeralda in Panama, separated it from the other cultivars and entered it in the national competition. It was so outrageously different, with fruited and floral character like a Yirga Cheffe coffee from half a world away. Word traveled fast, and other farms that received some of the seed started separating their Gesha coffee as well, as is the case here. The results are always a bit different: the cultivar "expresses" itself differently in terms of cup flavors at each location, influenced by weather, soil, altitude and the like. And with this coffee from the region of Acatenango, we have a Gesha cup that expresses much of that floral intensity that's become synonymous with the "Gesha" name. We've been the sole buyer of this coffee and have chosen to keep certain farm specifics to ourselves. The farm sits on the steep slopes of Volcan Acatenango between 1600 - 1700 meters and reaps the benefits of rich volcanic soil. This farm has been in the same family for a couple generations now and they've built out an impressive wet milling facility onsite as well.
| Region | Acatenango |
|---|---|
| Processing | Wet Process (Washed) |
| Drying Method | Patio Sun-Dried |
| Arrival date | July 2025 Arrival |
| Lot size | 60 |
| Bag size | 46 KG |
| Packaging | GrainPro Liner |
| Farm Gate | Yes |
| Cultivar Detail | Gesha |
| Grade | SHB EP |
| Appearance | .4 d/300gr, 15-18 Screen |
| Roast Recommendations | City to City+ |
| Type | Farm Gate |