The Hawaii Coffee Association‘s 15th statewide cupping competition drew 51% more participation this year, resulting in a broad range of small-lot and big-lot coffees earning high quality scores.
The competition ran alongside the recent sold-out Hawaii Coffee Association (HCA) annual conference in Kauai, which included panel discussions, interactive workshops, networking opportunities and a keynote address on sustainable coffee production from Nora Lapitan of the USDA Agricultural Research Service.
In a press announcement, HCA Cupping Chair and Pacific Coffee Research (PCR) Co-Owner Brittany Horn said the uptick in participation for the annual coffee competition might be partially attributed to a bounce-back in production following previous losses attributed to coffee leaf rust disease, which first came to the state in 2020 and soon after spread to every coffee-producing island of Hawaii.
The organizers this year also reprised a “commercial” category — requiring samples to come from green coffee lots of at least 300 pounds — alongside the “creative” category. Submissions in the latter category were required to reflect direct ownership of smallholder producers.
“I was so impressed with the top scores from this year’s competition,” said Horn. “The top 10’s average score was an 86.6 — up from 85.48 last year — and all coffees in the top 10 scored over 85 points.”
The top-scoring coffee statewide was a natural-process Gesha-variety coffee subjected to 36-hour anaerobic fermentation with a yeast inoculation that was produced by Geisha Kona Coffee. It scored 87.83.
(Note: The DCN style guide defaults to the word “Gesha,” rather than “Geisha,” when generically referring to this prominent arabica variety.]
The second-place coffee was a washed-process Gesha from Monarch Coffee Farm, while the third-place coffee, from Uluwehi Coffee Farm, was a 100-hour-fermented natural-process SL34-variety coffee. The top 11 coffees in the competition all came from Hawaii’s famed Kona growing region.
The competition also recognized winners from specific growing regions, including: Miranda’s Farms of Ka‘u; O’o Farm of Maui; Waialua Estate of Oahu; Hilo Coffee Company of the Hawaii region (Hilo and Puna); and Hog Heaven Coffee of Hamakua.
All of the above coffees came from the “creative” division. The top-scoring coffees in the “commercial” division were a washed-process Typica from Hula Daddy Kona Coffee (84.29), a washed-process Red Bourbon from Kopiko Farm (82.63), and a washed-process Typica from Mauka Meadows (82.63).
See the complete 2024 results here.
Kona-based PCR organized the cupping competition, which featured a panel of local and international experts led by PCR Co-Owner Madeleine Longoria Garcia. Other judges included: Lora Botanova of Big Island Coffee Roasters; independent consultant Alex Brooks; Krude Che-Hao Lin of the Taiwan Coffee Laboratory; Marc Marquez of Savor Brands; and Oliver Stormshak of Olympia Coffee Roasting and Oliver’s Custom Coffee.
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Tags: Alex Brooks, Big Island Coffee Roasters, Brittany Horn, competitions, cuppings, Geisha Kona Coffee, green coffee, Hawaii, Hawaii Coffee Association, Hawaii Coffee Association Annual Conference, Hilo Coffee Mill, Hog Heaven Coffee, Hula Daddy Kona Coffee, Kona, Kopiko Farm, Krude Che-Hao, Lora Botanova, Madeleine Longoria Garcia, Marc Marquez, Mauka Meadows, Miranda’s Farms, Monarch Coffee, Nora Lapitan, O’o Farm, Oliver’s Custom Coffee, Olympia Coffee Roasting, Pacific Coffee Research, Savor Brands, Taiwan Coffee Laboratory, Uluwehi Coffee Farm, Waialua Estate