In La Palma y El Tucán
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Neighbors & crops

ALFONSO GUTIERREZ

VILLA MONICA

Village: La Mesa, Cundinamarca
Altitude: 1650 M.A.S.L
Variety: Castillo

The Profile

Alfonso is a 65 year old farm, he owns a 1 hectare farm located in Buenavista municipality of La Mesa. In Villa Monica Farm, he has 5000 Castillo coffee plants and the main harvest is expected to be from April to June. He also grow plantain and banana.

His parents were traditional coffee farmers as well as his grandparents that was why he decided to keep with this tradition and produce great coffee. Before being part of Neighbors & Crops program he used to sell his coffee to cooperatives to the nearest town and expressed that he struggled finding cherry pickers to collect on time his coffee. With Neighbors & Crops program we can support him with our cherry-picking squad, infrastructure and labor needed to process his coffee.

Key Facts
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Gender Equality340Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed euismod sodales fringilla.
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Carbon Footprint39%Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed euismod sodales fringilla.
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Net Income25%Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed euismod sodales fringilla.

These facts were brought to you by Biodiversal

Proccesing Methods
Lactic

This kind of fermentation is classified as ‘Anaerobic’ as oxygen has minimal interaction with the cherry. Once the cherries arrive at the mill, they are hand sorted and placed in sealed tanks. With no oxygen involved, bacteria feed on carbohydrates present in the mucilage favoring a higher concentration of Lactic Acid, creating a unique profile of the resulting cup.

Honey

The Honey Process begins with a pre-fermentation stage of 45 hours at the wet mill. From here the cherries will start the de-pulping stage, passing through three stages of quality control before removing a percentage of the skin. While the drying stage, coffee will be placed in African-style raised beds for over 15 days. Due to the levels of sugar and moisture, the first days will be crucial to avoid microbial activity prolongation. Finally parchment coffee will pass through the mechanical drying machines to end up the drying process.

Mixed

This method involves a combination of stages found in lactic and acetic processing methods. First, all hand-sorted cherries will go through a short pre-fermentation step. Similar to lactic processing, the cherries are placed in airtight fermentation tanks with limited oxygen. Once removed from the tanks, we pass them through three levels of quality control before having the skin removed by a pulper machine. From there, we leave the beans resting in the fermentation tanks to undergo an acetic fermentation, agitating them from time to time. Once the process is completed, the beans are transferred to African-style raised beds to begin the drying phase.

Our Mixed Fermentation Processing produces a very balanced cup profile with medium to heavy body.

Bio-Innovation

Through the Bioinnovation process, La Palma & El Tucán honors the main principles of organic farming. They first capture and reproduce microorganisms found in their farm’s beautiful forests, to create their own fermentation substrate. Then, they mix this substrate with perfectly ripen geisha cherries, in a clay pot for 100 hours. This combination allows them to create a sustainable closed cycle. After the fermentation, they remove the leftovers and reuse them as compost.

If you wish to request additional information about the processing of your microlot, such as fermentation time or type of drying, please let us know by filling this form.

We will get back to you soon with detailed information.