A New Roster Of Coffees Now Available From Our Roasters Village

We get asked by friends and family where to buy coffee a lot. It’s a tough question! It’s easy to lose track of just how many incredible, fresh, vibrant coffees are out there. Every week, we ask our advertising roasting partners for coffee recommendations they’re most excited about. Here’s this week’s collection of some of the most interesting whole bean coffee offerings available from talented roasters across the globe.

Amavida Coffee RoastersCXFFEEBLACKEquator CoffeesGreater Goods Coffee Co.Joe Coffee CompanyMadcap Coffee CompanyMonogram CoffeeNight Swim CoffeeOlympia Coffee RoastersOnyx Coffee LabPartners CoffeePERC CoffeePortland Coffee RoastersStumptown Coffee RoastersVerve Coffee Roasters

Our coffee newsletter subscribers get this list each week, a few days before anyone else—check it out over at Substack.

Amavida Coffee Roasters

Amavida Coffee Roasters: Honey Comsa —This medium roast Honduran coffee from COMSA Cooperative has a mild, berry-like acidity and a full body. It features pronounced dried fruit notes in the aroma followed by prominent flavors of raisin, fig, and molasses. Certified Organic & Fair Trade Coffee.

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CXFFEEBLACK

Cxffeeblack: Fatherland—Kenya, Lions Hill Farm, Tinderet Nandi County, Solai Coffee Junt, Washed Peaberry. My father’s first connection to coffee, my first connection to coffee. When my dad went to Africa while in college, Kenya changed his life. Years later, he introduced Kenyan coffee to our household. I didn’t know it then, but this was the first clue that coffee, like me, was black. This cxffee is our latest from the all black supply chain, sourced by the Kuria family. They are a multi-generational African-owned Kenyan importing company bringing over coffee from their families and neighbor’s farms. We met the Kuria family at the second inaugural Color of Coffee Collective, and we’re so excited to be able to share the the first of our collaborative offerings with you.

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Equator Coffees

Equator Coffees: Super Bloom Blend—If you haven’t tried it yet, don’t miss out on our springtime seasonal blend! Super Bloom combines the unique qualities of sustainable coffees from Burundi, Colombia, and Ethiopia to create a celebratory and diverse flavor profile. 5% of every bag sold directly supports the women of the Turihamwe Washing Station via JNP Coffee, funding training for alternative income streams to boost their earnings during the coffee off-season.

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Greater Goods Coffee Co.

Greater Goods Roasting: Santa Gema —Last year, we had the privilege of visiting some incredible farms in Nicaragua, including Santa Gema. At Santa Gema, Mario Vilchez produces a remarkable maracaturra coffee with flavor notes of cherry cordial, tea rose, and tamarind. We’re proud to say that this coffee qualified for Nationals at the US Brewer’s Cup competition, a testament to its exceptional quality.

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Joe Coffee Company

Joe Coffee: The Village — Currently, The Village comes from the Rubí sisters’ farm Finca Ruland 2, in Las Vegas, Honduras. Andrea and her sisters’ skill and diligence shine through this lot of washed and natural coffees. Expect a complex balance of layered acidity and structured sweetness. Beginning with notes of deep citrus and stone fruit, flavors arc towards ripe cherry as the coffee cools, leaving us with a final, soft note of spice and caramel.

The Village is a celebration of women in coffee, composed of seasonally-rotating selections from valued relationships with female producers and cooperatives, aimed at highlighting and addressing this gender gap. According to strong research, investing in women increases the sustainability of coffee everywhere—women are more likely to reinvest their income back into their families, their coffee businesses, and their communities. And when access to decision-making and the global marketplace improves for women farmers, quality improves too.

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Madcap Coffee Company

Madcap Coffee: Miguel Ortiz—Miguel Ortiz is a native of Santa Barbara and a lifetime coffee farmer operating his farm, La Guinellera, alongside his wife and children. Miguel is viewed as the patriarch of Las Flores and drives the quality in the area. His coffee showcases what makes this region so unique.The climate is cool so the harvest is one of the later ones in Central America. During harvest, a team of 10-15 people — mostly family — harvest the cherry. After harvest, the coffee is dry fermented for 16 hours. The coffee then moves to a parabolic dryer, a specialized tool that utilizes solar power for drying agricultural products, for roughly 7 days. In this year’s harvest, expect a balanced body with notes of clementine, cherry, and cinnamon.

Monogram Coffee

Monogram Coffee: Elida Estate Catuai  —Lamastus FamilyPanama is now world famous for the gesha variety, producing some of the most delicious (and expensive) geshas in the world. Gesha’s popularity had a huge impact on speciality coffee by emphasizing the importance and impact of coffee variety. At the same time that there is an intense interest in variety, there is also a move to understand how processing can elucidate unique varietal characteristics in coffee varieties. Elida Estate is world famous for their gesha coffees, but they have not rested on their success and they are trying to improve every coffee they offer–including coffees that are not gesha.

They grow a large amount of Catuai on the farm and they have developed a process that brings the best out of the variety. They ferment the coffee cherry in oxygen-free tanks for 5 days and then dry it very slowly for up to 30 days, with the last part of the drying finished in a covered tent. This process reveals the power and structure of Catuai, with big aromas, intense fruit, and a heavy body.

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Night Swim Coffee

Night Swim Coffee: Kaku – Washed—CO-OP: KakuLOCATION: Menglian, Yunnan, ChinaALTITUDE: 1400 MASLVARIETY: CatimorPROCESSES: WashedTasting Notes: Meyer Lemon, Mandarin, Almond, NutmegThe first container of specialty coffee left Yunnan, China for Australia in late 2015. Over the last nine years, Yunnan’s specialty coffee production has increased in leaps and bounds in both quantity and quality. We’re typically not familiar with specialty grade Asian coffees, but the truth is that these coffees can pass quality tests with flying colors and display an enormous amount of sweetness, consistency, and complexity.We purchased two lots from the project in Yunnan, both washed and naturally processed 100% Catimor lots. Both of these coffees are high in complexity and sweetness, offered varied cup profiles, and we are honored to represent the best of what Chinese Specialty Coffee production has to offer.

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Olympia Coffee Roasters

Olympia Coffee: Amparo Pajoy Good Food Award Winner—Farmer Amparo Pajoy is a shining star of a person who’s dedicated to her community of San Sebastian de La Plata, Colombia. She’s also the producer of this Good Food Award-winning single-origin coffee! The Good Food Awards celebrate flavor and sustainability, recognizing products that are leading the way in quality and social responsibility.

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Onyx Coffee Lab

Onyx Coffee Lab : Doyenne — One 10oz Box of the World’s Best Female-Produced Coffee Once a Month + Roasted and shipped the first Wednesday of every month.

Doyenne is defined as a woman who is the most prominent person in a particular field. Coffee production is traditionally male led due to the cultural relationship dynamics in producing countries. Women have always contributed to and are often the backbone of coffee production, contributing detail oriented, quality-focused excellence to the field. Until recent years, they are rarely honored for this work. Doyenne seeks to identify and amplify the stories of woman achieving incredible marks in coffee. The selections are curated by Andrea Allen, co-founder of Onyx Coffee Lab and 2020 US Barista Champion. The heart is for women to collaborate and to boost each other’s work and achievement through stories.

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Partners Coffee

Partners Coffee: Ethiopia – Naga Singage—Our first Ethiopian coffee of the season comes from the Aricha Adorsi Washing Station in Yirgachefe. The station processes coffees from each of the surrounding communities as separate lots, promoting traceability while highlighting their distinct flavor profiles. This fully washed selection comes from a few dozen farmers on Naga Singage, “the mountain of reconciliation,” named for a ceremony traditionally held there in which disputes are presented and communally resolved. In their coffee we taste stone fruit, citrus, and flowers: think apricot, tangerine, honey, and orange blossom.

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PERC Coffee

PERC: El Salvador Delagua Pacamara—We knew we had to bring it in as soon as we tasted this coffee. It reminds us of freshly picked strawberries, oranges, and maple syrup. Pacamaras are giant beans that yield big, juicy flavors with lots of sweetness, and Delagua delivers on that reputation in spades. Now, we can fit these beans in the dang bag.

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Portland Coffee Roasters

Portland Coffee Roasters: Bridge Blend—This Limited Release is a blend of coffees from Guatemala and Peru. The Guatemala is from Maya Ixil, and the Peru is from the Pueblo Libre and Mamahuaca communities. When we cup this coffee it is floral and herbal, with hints of sugar cane and chocolate.

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Stumptown Coffee Roasters

Stumptown Coffee Roasters: Ecuador Rancho Carmen—This coffee is a combination of small lots from a group of 35 producers in Ecuador’s southernmost province. Rancho Carmen has a lush ganache body elevating notes of raspberry jam and brown sugar in a vibrant cup.

Verve Coffee Roasters

Verve Coffee Roasters : ASTER— Formerly known as The 1950, Aster’s components highlight the best of what Ethiopian coffee has to offer. A key lime sweetness and brown sugar complexity come together to inspire adventure in your morning.

The 1950 began as a blend that played with the idea of being a mid-century, mocha-java-type vintage blend that combined two African coffees. But as Verve continued to evolve, The 1950 grew beyond its name origins. As our only blend sourced from one origin roasted two different ways, Aster is our star on the map that marks the birthplace of coffee – Ethiopia.

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Sprudge Staff
May 5, 2024

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