Mexico Veracruz - Seleccion Huatusco (2022 Crop)

Chocolate chip, butterscotch, almond, heavy body
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Bag Weight 69 KG BAG
Harvest Season 2021/22
Status Spot
Lot Number P609357-1
  • Out of Stock Bag(s)
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About This Coffee

Huatusco is an ideal region to grow coffee thanks to its abundant rainfall. Processing coffee in Huatusco is slightly more complicated than in other Mexican regions during coffee harvest season due to the rainy days and very cold nights (which delay the fermentation process). Rainy conditions also mean a lot of coffee is mechanically dried. Unlike the early days of coffee in Veracruz, where coffee was first planted in Mexico, most coffee today is grown on small to medium sized farms of 1-18 hectares. Cherry is delivered to the wet mill during the afternoon and evening then de-pulped and fermented for an average of 15 - 20 hours, washed before being centrifugated and pre-dried, passing through a drying machine in a continuous flow for 30 - 36 hours to ensure avoidance of defects due to excess of moisture. 

Country of Origin Mexico
Harvest Season 2021/22
Coffee Grade MEX CA WA HG
Bag Type Grain Pro / Ecotact
Plant Species Arabica
Processing Washed
Variety Colombia, Costa Rica, Marsellesa, Oro Azteca, Sarchimor
Region Huatusco
Farm Name Various smallholders
Climate Tropical savannah

History of Coffee in Mexico

With seeds from the Caribbean, cultivation began in Veracruz, where custom house records indicate a few hundred bags of coffee were exported as early as 1802. But these exports were apparently anomalous because after 1805 coffee would not be exported again for twenty years, after the war of independence. Production did increase over this period, presumably for domestic trade and consumption. In 1817, a planter named Don Juan Antonio Gomez started “intensive cultivation” further south, where coffee thrived at high altitudes. By 1826 there were half a million trees in Cordoba and Mexican coffee was being exported.  In 1828, seeds—or possibly plants—from Arabia (Yemen) were planted in Uruapan, near the Pacific coast west of Mexico City, by Jose Mariano Michelena. Trees were brought from Guatemala to be planted in the southern state of Chiapas in 1847, and  Oaxaca would become the third largest producer of Mexican coffee by 1889.  

Growing Coffee in Mexico

Mexican coffee grows in 15 states throughout the southern half of the country but over 90% comes from four states: Veracruz, Oaxaca, Chiapas, and Puebla. Specialty coffee comes from the highlands of Veracruz on the gulf coast, the mountains of Oaxaca and Chiapas at the southern tip of Mexico. In Veracruz coffee grows from 1,100-1,660 m.a.s.l. In Chiapas coffee grows from 1,300-1,700 m.a.s.l. In Oaxaca coffee grows from 900-1,650 m.a.s.l. Coffee is grown by more than half a million farmers, 95% of these being smallholders cultivating less than three hectares and 85% of Mexico’s coffee farmers are indigenous Mexicans. Most Mexican coffee is grown under shade and Mexico is one of the world’s largest producers of certified organic coffee and Fair Trade coffee. Most Mexican coffee is Bourbon, Catura, Maragogype, or Mundo Novo, though other varieties can be found. Mexico grows almost no Robusta.  

  • Region Huatusco
  • Farm Name Various smallholders
  • Processing Washed
  • Bag Type Grain Pro / Ecotact
  • Plant Species Arabica
  • Variety Colombia, Costa Rica, Marsellesa, Oro Azteca, Sarchimor
  • Climate Tropical savannah
  • On Sale No
  • Top Lot No
  • Status Spot
  • Coffee Grade MEX CA WA HG
  • CTRM Contract Number P609357-1
  • Country of Origin Mexico
  • Warehouse The Annex