Country: Colombia
State:
Nariño
Municipality: Tablón de Gómez
Town: Aponte
Farmer:
Roni Gómez
Altitude: 2,100m above sea level
Variety: Colombia
Processing:
Honey Processed
Pineapple, mango and papaya. Rich, complex and juicy.
About La Pradera (with thanks to Melbourne Coffee Merchants):
This honey-processed microlot was produced by Roni Gómez at his 2.5 hectare farm La Pradera, which sits at a staggering elevation of 2,100m above sea level in the town of Aponte, in north-western Nariño, Colombia. Aponte’s unique micro-climate, with warm winds and year-round cool temperatures, contributes to the success of honey processing in the area. The producers in the region have become expert in this processing method, resulting in clean, sweet and fragrant coffees that are distinct to the town.
Roni has been a coffee farmer for over fifteen years, dedicating his last seven to specialty production. He has been recognised as a leader in Aponte’s farming community due to his efforts in helping his colleagues grow high-quality coffee and find a market for their crops. Seeing the benefits and added financial incentives that come with specialty coffee production, Roni has partnered with fellow producer and neighbour Nixon Adarme to buy small amounts of cherry from producers who cannot process or dry it themselves, and connect them to international buyers like MCM.
At La Pradera, Roni mainly grows the Castillo and Colombia varieties, which were introduced by Colombia’s National Coffee Federation (FNC) in an effort to minimise the incidence of coffee leaf rust and disease. When planted at high elevations and dry-processed carefully, both varieties have great potential for quality, and have become regular high performers in the country’s Cup of Excellence competition.
Aponte is extremely remote and hard to reach, found deep inside Juanambú Canyon and surrounded by steep, rugged mountains. The town experiences a cool climate and high winds year-round and sits on very fertile soil, thanks to the nutrient-rich ash constantly shed by nearby Galeras Volcano.
The farms in the region are tiny – averaging just 1 hectare – and are some of the highest situated coffee farms in Colombia, with most sitting above 2,000 meters above sea level. The producers who grow coffee around Aponte are pioneers in developing farming and processing techniques that successfully produce coffee in such unique conditions.
Aponte is home to the Inga people, an ethnic group who are historically related to the Inca and indigenous to parts of Colombia, Peru and Ecuador. The town was once called Janguana and was the northernmost point of the Incan empire. Visiting Aponte is a unique experience; the town operates as an indigenous reserve, independent from the Colombian government. On the streets, people continue to wear traditional garments (‘cusma’ for men and ‘pacha’ for women) and to speak to each other in the local Inga language, a dialect derived from Quechua (the pre-colonial language of the Inca people from the Andean Mountains).
ABOUT NARIÑO
Nariño is located in southwest Colombia, bordering Ecuador. Coffee in Nariño is grown at elevations that reach 2,200 metres above sea level, making it some of highest grown coffee in the world. It is typically very difficult to produce coffee at such high elevations, however Nariño’s proximity to the equatorial line, coupled with its steep hills and valleys surrounding active volcanoes, provide a great angle for sun exposure and create an ideal micro-climate for coffee plants to thrive. The high elevation of cultivation combined with warm tropical days and cool nights allows for slow maturation and development of the coffee cherry, giving time for concentrated sugars to develop in the fruit and resulting in a unique, very sweet, and complex cup profile.
For a long period in the 1990s and early 2000s, Nariñ0 was hit incredibly hard by violence and civil unrest, with much of the region under the control of the FARC guerrillas. The high elevations and rugged terrain of the state’s rural regions were ideal for growing opium poppy plants and coca, making it the perfect centre of operations for illegal groups and preventing a heavy government presence.
Until recently, much of Nariño’s potential for coffee quality remained largely untapped. Most of the forty thousand coffee producers in Nariño are tiny (averaging less than 2 hectares of land each) and often, like these small producers in Aponte, located extremely remotely. These factors, combined with ongoing armed conflict in the region, has discouraged investment in coffee development and made it difficult for coffee buyers to access these exceptional coffees.
In the early 2010s, this started to change, thanks in large part to the Colombian Cup of Excellence, which shone the light on two exceptional lots from the Buesaco municipality in Northern Nariño. This important achievement made it clear to many growers from the region that their coffee had the potential to be sold as true specialty grade and that they had the opportunity to seek greater premiums than they were receiving through other certification schemes. Today coffee plays a big role in helping the community as they turn the page on the region’s violent past and build a more sustainable future. Many of those that left the region during the worst part of the conflict in the 90s have since returned to continue their coffee tradition and rebuild their lives.
Our export partners for this coffee, Pergamino, have worked hard commercialise specialty-grade coffee throughout Nariño, and have uncovered some stunning coffees and dedicated producers in the process. They work closely with the producers to give them feedback on their coffees (provided by Pergamino’s expert team of cuppers) and provide top up payments when the coffee is sold at a higher premium.
Head here to learn more about the work of Pergamino.
HOW THIS COFFEE WAS PROCESSED
For this lot, coffee cherries were carefully hand-picked by Roni and local hired help he employs during the peak of the harvest, with several passes needed to ensure only the ripest ones were chosen. These were then pulped at each farm’s wet mill, or ‘micro-beneficio.’ After pulping, coffee was placed on drying beds without being washed, leaving coffee with a layer of mucilage that resembles a glazing of sticky honey (hence the name ‘honey’ processing) for around 30 days. This step ensured fermentation occurred as the coffee dried.
Thanks to Aponte’s cool, windy climate and high elevations, coffee generally dries more quickly and evenly than in lower parts of Colombia. This leads to more consistency in the coffees produced, and encourages the development of cleaner, more complex flavours in the cup. To ensure the drying stage occurred uniformly, coffee for this lot was regularly turned by hand until it reached ideal moisture content.
Once dry, the coffee was delivered to Pergamino’s warehouse, where it was cupped and graded, and then rested in parchment until ready for export.