Ethiopia Yirgacheffe Awash River Natural (2019)

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Bag Weight 60 KG BAG
Harvest Season 2018/19
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Lot Number P604542-1
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About This Coffee

'Awash River' is a new naturally processed coffee from smallholder farmers serviced by the river Awash in the Yirgacheffe region of southern Ethiopia. These farmers rely on the great river and its many tributaries to cultivate coffee and sustain their communities.


The Yirgacheffe region has developed a reputation for some of the most sought-after coffees in the world. With the river Awash as a rich source of clean water, the combination of high altitude, fertile soils and abundant sunshine provides ideal conditions for arabica coffee cultivation.


THE PROCESS


This coffee is naturally processed, whereby ripe coffee cherries are dried in the sun on raised African beds for around 12-15 days, depending on ambient conditions. This sun-drying process allows for sugars in the cherry pulp to transfer into the bean, presenting in the cup as complex fruit flavours. Raised beds provide airflow to facilitate a consistent drying process, though the cherries are also turned periodically to prevent mould and covered at night to protect from rain and moisture. Once the ideal moisture content is reached the dried cherries are rested in a cool environment before being hulled, graded and handpicked prior to export.


"THE CRADLE OF HUMANKIND (AND COFFEE)"


The Awash carves through almost 750 miles of Ethiopia's great rift valley, providing a vital water source for millions. In fact Archaeologists believe humans have lived along the river since the dawn of man. Known as "the cradle of humankind", the middle Awash is to some of the most important archaeological discoveries in history, including perhaps the most famous hominid fossil ever found: "Lucy".


In a poetic twist, Ethiopia is also the birthplace of the arabica coffee tree. As farmers began to harvest the wild forest trees of Southern Ethiopia they in turn began to cultivate them on their own land. Nevertheless, much of the coffee in Ethiopia still grows wild and is represented by thousands of different sub-varieties, many of which are cultivated by farmers throughout regions such as Yirgacheffe to this day.

 
 
 
 

Why is Ethiopia So Special?

Separate Ethiopia from coffee, the facts and the lore, and it remains one of the most fascinating regions in the world. Ethiopia is home to the oldest evidence for humankind, one of the oldest alphabets in the world still in use, and one of the oldest Christian churches in the world. Christianity arrived in Ethiopia at roughly the same time as Emperor Constantine’s conversion, and Ethiopian Orthodox Christianity is, arguably, as old as Roman Catholicism. Some people might believe that the first Indiana Jones should have included a visit to the Ethiopian city of Axum. Other than a brief “visit” by Italians in the 1930’s, Ethiopia was never colonized. It’s an interesting place before we even start talking about coffee.

 

Though we consider the coffee origin story of a goatherd named Kaldi and his frolicking goats a myth (the French version says they were “prancing,” and even “executing lively pirouettes”), this story of how coffee was discovered has persisted for centuries. Different versions of the story usually part ways when detailing what Kaldi did after discovering the effects of eating the coffee cherries. Most stories include the discovery being passed to monks, usually but not always Christian, who use the coffee to remain awake during religious devotions. Sometimes a monk is passing by while Kaldi is dancing with his goats. Other times, Kaldi goes home and his wife tells him to take the cherries to a nearby monastery.  What nearly every story of Kaldi and his goats has in common is the location: Ethiopia, or Abyssinia.

 

Just twenty years after Constantine declared Christianity a legal religion in the Roman empire, and nearly seventy years before the New Testament was ratified at Carthage, Abyssinia declared Christianity the state religion. A group of monks known as the “Nine Saints,” fleeing persecution of those who did not agree with Pope Leo, began establishing monasteries in the northern region of the country  in the late 5th Century. Their disciples, a group named the “Seven Stars,” continued this work and eventually several monasteries were established on and around Lake Tana. In one version of the Kaldi story, he takes the coffee cherries to a monastery at Lake Tana. Today, there are seven monasteries on the Lake’s southern peninsula, where coffee still grows wild and is still harvested. Lake Tana is not short on legends either: It is said that the Arc of the Covenant was hidden for a thousand years on Kirkos Islands on Lake Tana before being moved to Saint Mary’s of Zion in Axum around 400 AD.

 

Whether or not we believe there are kernels of truth in the legend of Kaldi and other stories about how coffee brewing was born, with arch angels, whirling dervishes, and ghosts, there is virtual certainty that the coffee plant originated in Ethiopia. It seems fitting, if not poetic, that the region might be the birthplace of both coffee and humankind; although, it should be noted that other places lay claim to the origin designation, Yemen for coffee and South Africa for humans.

 

Coffee is ancient in Ethiopia but coffee farming is not. If the story of Kaldi is true, most writers indicate he would have boogied with his goats in the 8th or 9th Century, but this is difficult to reconcile with the establishment of monasteries in regions where wild coffee was plentiful.  In any case, by the end of the 9th Century coffee was actively being cultivated in Ethiopia as food, but not as a beverage. This is largely an educated guess by those who are educated and guess at such things. It was the Arab world that developed brewing, in most stories, through a series of accidents. The coffee is accidentally roasted, accidentally ground, and accidentally put in water. By the time Constantinople fell to the Ottomans in 1453, the good news was, they brought coffee.

 

Even as coffee became an export for Ethiopia, it was the result of gathering more than agricultural practices. A hundred years ago, plantations, mostly in Harar, were still the exception, while “Kaffa” coffee from the southwest was still harvested wild. In 1935, William Ukers wrote:

 

“Wild coffee is also known as Kaffa coffee, from one of the districts where it grows most abundantly in a state of nature. The trees grow in such profusion that the possible supply, at a minimum of labor in gathering, is practically unlimited. It is said that in south-western Abyssinia there are immense forests of it that have never been encroached upon except at the outskirts.”

 

After causing us all to have dreams about endless forests of wild Ethiopian coffee, some of which may never have been seen by a human, let alone roasted and brewed, Ukers goes on to describe the processing method for this coffee: “It is shelled where it is found, in the most primitive fashion, and goes out in dirty, mixed condition.”

 

 Obviously, Ukers was not a fan of “wild” coffee from Kaffa. He describes the quality as poor and says the coffee is “lazily picked up” off the ground, which tells us he never spent ten hours picking coffee cherries up off the ground. He notes that harvesters “adhere to the old-time dry method of cleaning,” and coffee is “cleaned by primitive hand methods after its arrival in trading centers.”

 

Ethiopia had fought fiercely and successfully to remain independent of European occupation, a fact rightly celebrated by all of Africa. Unlike coffee regions that had suffered colonization, Ethiopia had been introduced to very little in the way of processing infrastructure. When Ukers wrote about the “immense” coffee forests, there was almost no machine milling anywhere in Ethiopia, and certainly not in the southwest. Ethiopia’s reputation for wild, naturally processed coffee, often fermented and sour, would persist for decades. The government began attempting to improve quality in the 1950’s, with mixed result. And although Ethiopia had never been colonized, it was not immune to the political instability that swept the continent as others gained independence. Nearly 20 years of totalitarian communist rule virtually eliminated previous attempts by the government to improve quality.

 

When Ethiopia emerged from the dark days of dictatorship in 1991, the specialty coffee industry was approaching the “boom years,” when the number of coffeehouses would double every two years. But Ethiopia had seen virtually no improvement in processing for fifty years. Importers and green coffee buyers had to be vigilant and often search long and hard to find Ethiopian coffees that could be sold as specialty. This scarcity, and the uniqueness of quality coffee when found, made Ethiopian specialty coffee relatively expensive.

  • Region Yirgacheffe
  • Producer Type Small Holder Farmers
  • Processing Natural/Dry Processed
  • Processing Description Sun dried on raised African beds
  • Bag Type Grain Pro / Ecotact
  • Plant Species Arabica
  • Variety Ethiopia Heirloom Varieties
  • On Sale No
  • Top Lot No
  • Status Spot
  • Coffee Grade ETH CA WA YIRG G3
  • CTRM Contract Number P604542-1
  • Country of Origin Ethiopia
  • Warehouse Continental NJ