Ethiopia Halo Beriti - Espresso

Friedhats

About This Coffee

Sometimes we get so caught up in our world of coffee that we use terms without considering if people who work outside of coffee know what they mean. We’re trying to get better about that, or at least defining them well for you. So today we’re addressing the term “smallholders.” You see it a lot when talking about coffees, especially from Ethiopia or Kenya. But what are smallholders, and what does it mean when we say this coffee comes from 750 of them? There isn’t a strict parameter to what makes a producer a smallholder, but in essence it’s someone growing a (relatively) small amount of coffee. In most markets coffee is a non-native cash crop, spread via colonialism to form large monocrop estates, producing thousands of kilos of coffee each year- growing, processing, and drying all on site. Alternatively, in Ethiopia, where coffee is native and has grown wild for centuries, it is more common to have portions of small or sustenance farms growing native trees. The scale of production on these farms can range from some scattered trees, to a garden, up to around a hectare of coffee. These are what we know as smallholders. Understanding that this is the scope of the majority of producers in Ethiopia, it’s easy to understand why washing stations are instrumental to the production process. In such small quantities it doesn’t make much sense to undertake processing yourself, so farmers sell their lots to the washing station to finish the process on their behalf. Because so many farmers participate in this system, logistically it’s difficult to trace 20 kilos to this farm, and 200 kilos to another, and even less practical to sell these as tiny microlots.

Details

Origin
Ethiopia
Region
Gedeb, Yirgacheffe
Producer
750 smallholder farmers
Altitude (MASL)
2100 – 2300 m
Process
Natural
Varieties
Heirloom
Tasting Notes
Star fruitMixed berriesFloral
MSRP (Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price)
250gr14.9 EUR
1000gr EUR

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