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Colombia Las Brisas

Regular price £57.50

Location:
La Estrella, Acevedo, Huila
Producer
Jhon Wilmer
Varietal:
Castillo, Caturra, Gesha
Process: Natural. Extended Fermentation
Altitude:
1900 Metres
Cup profile:
 Pineapple, pomegranate, raisin, tropical candy

 

About This Coffee

Jhon Wilmer is a young coffee grower who has continued his family's coffee legacy at their family finca, Las Brisas. Jhon took several courses at SENA and today helps his father to grow high-quality coffee, accompanied by several fermentation processes and incorporating exoctic varieties such as Gesha, Java, Ombligón, Aji, Pink Bourbon, among others.

We have been working with Jhon now for a few seasons, and he has become one of our principle partners exceptional quality coffees from Colombia.

The Process

Cherries are harvested by hand, sorted, and washed. They are then fermented in sealed bags for 80 hours, then dried on parabolic beds in a marquesina (a specialised drying marquee) designed to control airflow.

The Region

The Huila region is well known for its coffee quality, but also for being the first historical department in Colombia to begin coffee production. Farmers in Huila are very quality-conscious. Their crops receive a lot of care and attention and they tend to be the most pioneering when it comes to embracing new processing and farming methods. The most relevant municipalities for coffee in Huila are: Pitalito, Garzón, Gigante, San Agustín, La Plata, Paicol, Acevedo, among others.

Huila coffee represents 18% of Colombian production. It is always in high demand and is often preferred as a single origin offering for its balance of acidity and sweetness. The Huilan landscape is dominated by volcanos and mountains, providing a rich terroir of high altitude and fertile soils and offering a wide range of ecosystems where coffee can be grown. There are producing farms ranging from 1,500 m.a.s.l. up to 2,300 m.a.s.l., conferring great attributes to the cup profile such as bright acidity and characteristic sweet notes.

History of Coffee in Colombia

As with many coffee origins, it is believed that coffee was first brought to Colombia by priests, arriving, perhaps, within a decade or two after coffee first came to the Americas via the Caribbean in the first half of the 17th century. It was likely a garden crop grown for local consumption and barter for decades. Unlike other coffee regions, we have the story of a priest named Francisco Romero, who could be called the father of commercial coffee cultivation in Colombia. The folkloric tale goes that in the early 1800’s, Father Francisco, hearing confessions in the north eastern town of Salazar de la Palmas, assigned planting coffee to his parishioners as penance for their sins. The Archbishop of Colombia heard about this and ordered all priests to adopt the practice. Commercial production of coffee expanded quickly, moving into regions where the growing conditions were ideal. 

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