Panama continued

March 29th, 2010
there are worse places to visit

there are worse places to visit

little gesha in bloom

little gesha in bloom

For those of you who haven’t heard it, here’s the story in brief: the Petersons bought Jaramillo farm about 15 years ago, and at the beginning of last decade started cupping specific areas of the farm to see what kinds of variations and characteristics they might find. From these tests they found that one area in particular produced a coffee that was very different from everything else. This coffee is now known as the Especial, and was coffee picked from trees of the now famous gesha varietal. The varietal itself made its way to Panama from Ethiopia–probably via Costa Rica–roughly 40 years ago, but no one is quite sure of its path or origin. In fact, Rachel told me that the Petersons are no longer calling their coffee “gesha,” as she thinks that it’s not really an accurate name for the varietal, and perhaps more importantly, does little to describe the particular coffee that the Petersons grow and prep. 

the obligatory snapshot

the obligatory snapshot

There are now “gesha” plants growing in other  parts of Panama–and in other countries–because of the interest that the Peterson’s successes drummed up (amazingly enough, the Petersons themselves have provided seed to numerous other growers in the area), but to date, no other coffee has resulted in the specific–and fantastic–profile of the best Esmeralda lots. It will be interesting to see what happens in the future, as more and more gesha coffees begin to appear.

new gesha planted at 1800 meters (I think)

new gesha planted at 1800 meters (I think)

The Petersons, of course, have themselves planted more of their “Especial” trees. The above picture is of a few hectares of land planted in gesha at one of the highest points of their farm. These plants had been in the ground for four years, if I remember correctly, but were still probably another four or five years away from any kind of commercially harvestable production: as you might guess, the higher you go, the more slowly the plants grow. But the Petersons have plenty of other coffee to harvest in the meantime–most of which is not gesha. In fact, these auction coffees represent less than 1 or 2 percent of their harvest.

bagging Diamond Mountain at Esmeralda

bagging Diamond Mountain at Esmeralda

The Petersons also have an interesting test farm, in which different varietals of coffee are growing. Theoretically, such experiments will allow them to make decisions about what kinds of coffee to plant in the future.
at the test farm

at the test farm

But there’s always a bit of mystery in coffee, as the “north side/south side of the creek” example–and others–proves out. You never really know what you’re going to get until you pick it, process it, and get it in the cup.

Panama, part 1

March 29th, 2010

Last week I returned from visiting a few farmers, mills and coffee folks in Panama and El Salvador. I came back with lots of information–much of which I’m still attempting to process–and lots of pictures. I’ll spare you from most of the latter–how many images of ripe coffee cherries can one stand?–but I hope you enjoy what I do post here.

The trip started out with a flight from Boston to Panama City. I took a taxi to a second airport from which all domestic flights depart, flew to David, in the western part of the country, and then took a taxi to Boquete. David itself was pretty hot, but as we made our way to Boquete, the night air became more and more comfortable. That’s what gaining a couple thousand feet in altitude will do, I suppose. My Spanish was pathetic, but I managed to fumble my way through a conversation about baseball with my driver. He told me that Mariano Rivera was from the Chiriqui province, in which Boquete sits; I told him I wouldn’t hold that agains Panama or its coffee.

Good morning, Boquete.

Good morning, Boquete.

The next morning I met Rachel Peterson at a coffee shop in town. Rachel’s family owns the renowned Hacienda la Esmeralda, home of the now infamous gesha varietal. A couple of years ago a lot of Esmeralda became the most expensive coffee in the world when it sold for $130 per lb, green. Nowadays the Petersons hold their own auction online, in which the coffee from their two farms is split up into ten or so lots, and sold to bidders from around the world. If I recall correctly, last year’s coffee lots sold from between around six bucks to a hundred bucks per lb.

We first made our way to the Jaramillo farm, where the Especial grows.

Blossoms: next year's coffee.

Blossoms: next year's coffee . . .

. . . and this year's crop

. . . and this year's crop

The farm is in a beautiful spot (not that there is an ugly spot in Boquete). A fair amount of the harvesting had already been done, but there was still some fruit on the trees. As we walked up the mountain, Rachel explained how the farm itself was segmented into different areas, and how crops were separated accordingly. Such specificity becomes important when buyers decide on which lots to bid. For instance, here’s a shot of the small creek that runs through the farm:

what's your preference--north or south?

what's your preference--north or south?

Not much to look at, but it serves as a major landmark in delineating what coffee comes from where, and bidders have strong opinions on which plots produce the best coffee. “North of the creek” or “south of the creek” can mean the difference between  who bids and who doesn’t.

Some nifty trees, and plenty of shade for the coffee

Some nifty trees, and plenty of shade for the coffee

 

not a bad view

not a bad view

The Petersons have their own mill, or beneficio, on site, which assures them of the ability to monitor the quality of their crop from the time it’s picked from the tree to when it’s weighed out and bagged up.
fermentation tanks and depulpers

fermentation tanks and depulpers

The patio and the dry mill

The patio and the dry mill

gesha being dried on the patio

gesha being dried on the patio

one of this year's auction lots at rest

one of this year's auction lots at rest

what bad coffee looks like

February 19th, 2010

My wife just returned from Haiti. I won’t go into the details of her trip–you can read about it at www.maine-hope.blogspot.com — but when she came back, she had a surprise for me: genuine Haitian green coffee. There was about three pounds of it in a plastic bag. I was pleased (I had asked her to get some for me), but knew that the beans in the bag awaiting my inspection were probably going to be in rough shape.

Little did I know . . . they were quite a bit worse than I had imagined. Upon opening the bag, I was hit with an odor of mold–never a good sign. So, below are a few pictures of the green coffee itself. Doesn’t look too bad, right?

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Here’s a close-up:

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and another:

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How ’bout one more?

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Just about every defect in the book with these beans: unripes, chips, insect damage . . . those beans on the bottom right are covered with mold.

What I ended up doing was sorting them as best I could, and this is what I came up with:

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Not specialty grade, by any stretch of the imagination, but quite a bit better. It took about 30 minutes to pick out an ounce or two of beans. We’re talking one decent bean per 50 or 60. You can still see that the beans above have issues (the one in the center, for example–pale yellow accompanying the green), most of which would be due to poor drying. And the moisture content was still very high (thus, the mold), but here’s a side by side with a recent sample arrival of a new crop Sumatra. The Haiti coffee is on the right:

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The actually end up looking somewhat similar. Sumatras usually ship with a higher moisture content, due to how they are processed–soon after the coffee is picked, the cherry fruit and parchment are stripped from the bean in one fell swoop, while the beans are still very moist and sponge-like. The Haitian coffee, on the other hand, was probably dried whole on the ground, and then perhaps pounded in a pestle and mortar until the seeds emerged. Just a guess, though. Here’s another comparison shot, with washed coffees from Nicaragua and Peru as points of reference:

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And a close-up of the Peru sample:314

You can see the beans are much more uniform-looking and are lighter in color (they look a bit more faded in this light than they actually are).

But here was what came out of the sample roaster315

And the brewed coffee was actually pretty decent. It had nice lively aromatics, and some pleasant chocolate in the aftertaste. Much more along the lines of a Sumatra than a Caribbean coffee, but not bad.

Thoughts on what this all means in my next post. Time for bed.

Roasting this week Thurs 12/17

December 16th, 2009

Hi folks,

Roasting on Thursday this week. This will be the last day to order something and make sure it arrives by Christmas. We are roasting at the beginning of next week as well, but there’s a good chance that coffee mailed then will spend the holiday in a post office or distribution center somewhere.

We will, however, have extra samplers on hand, and will be mailing them daily.

 

Cheers,

Matt

Common Ground Country Fair

October 4th, 2009

Hi folks,

It’s been a while since I’ve entered anything here–certainly not from lack of content. I’ll start updating you about what’s going on here in the coming weeks.

I’ll start by noting that we had a booth at the Common Ground Country Fair last weekend. For those of you who live here in Maine, you know this is significant. Coffee has not been allowed on the fair grounds since the Fair’s inception over 30 years ago, for a few different reasons. How’d we get in? Sort of a long story, but the main driver was a change in language (and intent) to one of MOFGA’s mission statements which, essentially, validated the support of sustainable agricultural practices anywhere on the globe. We’re proponents of local agriculture, of course, but were happy to share our product with the CGCF’s 50,000 attendees. We gave away lots of samples, and met lots of nice folks. To those of you who stopped by–thanks for coming out. We hope to be back next year.

We also had an article about coffee in the fair’s program, which I’m going to attach here. This is the longer version–the one that was published was a bit shorter.

 Cheers,

Matt

 

Coffee at the Fair

 

 

As a coffee roaster and coffee enthusiast, I am pleased that the product I love has a presence at this year’s Common Ground Country Fair. On the one hand, sipping a cup of meticulously-prepped El Injerto from the Huehuetenango highlands of Guatemala requires no more of an excuse than does sipping a glass of Premier Cru Bordeaux from Lafite-Rothschild. Both are their own justification, perfect unto themselves. And yet coffee is not without controversy—especially at a venue emphasizing the importance of sourcing food locally. If you’re like me, you probably enjoyed a cup or two this morning, and this coffee got to you by way of a circuitous journey with a dubious carbon footprint. From tropical hillside to mill to warehouse to port, across an ocean or two to another port—if it was a decaf, it might have made a detour through Veracruz, or Vancouver—to another warehouse, to a roastery, to a retailer, and finally to you. Yikes.

 

Likewise, coffee’s social history is pretty ugly. In its movement from Ethiopia (where it originated, and still grows wild) to the Pacific Islands and the Americas, it has left a fair amount of suffering and poverty in its wake. In the modern era, colonialism has given way to exploitation in a new form: prices that have simply been too low to sustain the human beings who grow and harvest coffee. Last year coffee was the world’s fifth most valuable commodity, behind only oil, coal, wheat and corn. Yet the market at the time of this writing—prices paid by traders, and not the money paid to producers themselves—hovered at around 78 cents per pound for robustas (the stuff they use for instant coffee, among other things), and $1.40 for mild arabicas (the canned stuff you generally find at a box store). And these prices are, historically speaking, quite high.

 

While there isn’t a whole lot we can do about the distance coffee travels from seed to cup—there won’t ever be a Finca Katahdin—there are organized efforts to bypass unjust market conditions and get more money into the hands of the people who actually grow the coffee we enjoy. Among these are programs run by organizations such as Utz Kapeh, the Rainforest Alliance and, perhaps most notably, TransFair USA. In the case of the latter, the organization sets and makes sure that producers receive a fair trade minimum price, and green coffee importers and roasters who enroll in TransFair’s program pay the organization a fee for each pound of green coffee purchased as well. These monies fund its auditing system and create an additional pool of funding for social and economic projects in coffee growing communities.  

 

Organic certification has also provided farmers with opportunities to reach consumers in ways unavailable fifteen or twenty years ago. As someone attending this fair, you already know that growing produce without the aid of petroleum-based fertilizers and chemical pesticides is better for the earth and the people who belong to it. In the coffee lands, this means decreased nutrient run-off into local water supplies (it takes a lot of water to process coffee), a chemical-free working environment for those who tend to and harvest the coffee, and more varied and abundant flora and fauna on the farm itself. But the growing desirability of organic produce has also resulted in better incomes for organic coffee farmers—a boon for those who, unable to afford fertilizers, had been utilizing organic methods by default.

 

In the midst of such progress, however, farmers have encountered formidable challenges: fair trade non-profits themselves acting more like businesses than advocates, bureaucratic and governmental hurdles, the myriad costs (in money, labor and lost yields) that accompany organic certification at origin. While a third party certification label signifies a marked improvement over commodified coffee, and provides a consumer some minimal assurances pertaining to sustainability, it does not necessarily speak to best practices, and certainly not to ideal solutions.

 

The stakes in making the coffee chain more environmentally sustainable and economically just are exceptionally high. Consider the Oromia Coffee Farmer’s Cooperative Union in Ethiopia, a country producing some of the most delicious coffee available (and a country currently experiencing pains as it attempts to better control its primary export by creating its own coffee exchange). Last year OCFCU produced 144,000 tons of coffee, or about 1 ¾ percent of the world’s annual supply. An incredible 617,000 households were involved in the production of this coffee only. There are literally tens of millions of individuals who depend upon what we drink for their livelihoods.

 

While the enormity of the global coffee industry may make your own choices seem insignificant, it is this very scale that can allow coffee lovers to make a real difference. As we demand more responsibly sourced and better quality coffees, and so drive up prices paid to producers, we improve lives. Even a ten or twenty cent per pound increase given to coffee farmers at origin makes a dramatic difference in their quality of life. There is a long, long way to go in making the global coffee landscape truly “fair,” but there are many folks involved in the coffee chain doing what they can to bring this vision closer to fruition.

 

As one of those links, I invite you to ask your local shop owner or roaster about the coffee they sell: where it comes from, who grew it, what cultivar it is, how it was processed. Ask them about the certifications of their coffees, and how they know their coffees are sustainably grown. Ask them about the goofy tasting notes they provide on the bag or menu board. (Coffee contains over 1000 compounds—fats, proteins, carbohydrates—while wine has “only” 150.) And sure, ask them about that coffee made out beans culled from animal poop. (It’s called Kopi Luwak.) And take more care in preparing your coffee. Drink less coffee, but drink better coffee. And really enjoy it. It’s not a Caffeine Delivery System. It’s a special beverage.

 

Cheers,

Matt Bolinder

Matt’s Wood Roasted Organic Coffee

New coffees on the way

May 15th, 2009

This is a fun time of year. Fiddleheads are out, mayflies are starting to pop, and new crop coffees from Central America are starting to appear. Importers are also lining up their offers from Ethiopia. But it’s going to be even more interesting than it normally is. Yields for Centrals are down, and there’s lots of, uh, odd stuff happening in the world of coffee in Ethiopia. Hard to explain efficiently, but the gist of it is that the government is now playing a central role in how coffee is sold and exported abroad. There are good and bad points for farmers with this intervention, but the coffees that we generally offer shouldn’t be affected too much–except for the price (which, as you might guess, is up this year. Again).  Certified organics generally come from co-operatives, and co-ops are allowed to bypass the gov’t commodities exchange, so we’ll see how it all pans out. We’re keeping our eye on a couple of containers that are afloat, and look forward to cupping them once they arrive.

What is certain is that we will have two new coffees in-house next week. The first is a new Sumatra Mandehling. Not a huge bodied coffee, but it’s got a lot going on in the cup. We tend to like coffees from Sumatra that are on the cleaner/sweeter side–not too much funk, or even green herbiness–but sometimes clean Sumatras can be kind of boring. This new coffee has an acidity that is brighter than the coffees we’ve offered before, with some sweet berry and floral aromatics, especially at the lighter roasts.  It’ll be fun to see how it comes out of the big roaster–it’s always an improvement.

Also scheduled to arrive is our new crop ”Apanas” from Nicaragua. This will be the third year in a row that we have carried this coffee from the UCASUMAN (Union de Cooperativas Agropecuarios de Servicios Unidas de Mancotal) co-operative. It’s fun to try new coffees and offerings–and in the case of many origins, it’s absolutely necessary–but we also like supporting some growers on a consistent basis. This coffee has been steady, year in and year out, so it hasn’t been too difficult a decision. Expect what you’ve come to admire in the Nic, but a little more of it: more floral aromatics, m0re sweetness (because we’ll be able to roast it a tad darker without eclipsing the acidity), and a little more snap. Yum.

roasting Wednesday 3/25 this week

March 24th, 2009
yes, that's real wood

yes, that's real wood

I received the above image from a customer (I think? I assumed. Maybe n0t) in Appleton, ME.  Pretty awesome. You can’t really drink hot coffee (effectively/repeatedly) from a wooden vessel, but the above mug seems to me to be a nice compromise. A beautiful one, certainly.

 Stephen Gleasnor is an artist whose medium is plywood. Check out the plyscapes on his web page. I love the fact that he’s making something with depth and richness from something so flat and cheap (though, actually, plywood isn’t all that cheap).

www.stephengleasner.com

More woodpile pictures

March 16th, 2009
Jason Ward's dog "Hatch" likes what he sees

Jason Ward's dog "Hatch" likes what he sees

Bob Tully finishing up

Bob Tully finishing up

A couple more woodpile pictures for you all.  Nice and stable, symmetrical, decent airflow–quality woodpiles. Lori Tully submitted the picture of her husband with a nice note–apparently, she appreciates the work that went into all that wood. I imagine they’re about three quarters of the way through their cordwood right about now . . .

the Lombard log hauler

February 23rd, 2009

We at Matt’s are interested in all things wood, and this weekend I saw something that was pretty cool. There was a short segment on the local news about a rehabilitated Lombard log hauler in action. To call the Lombard a train on skis is probably as good a short description as any, but their function was actually to twitch logs. They were designed to replace oxen and horses, but their tenure in the woods was pretty brief, as they had a reputation for unruly behavior.

What’s more, these machines were manufactured in Waterville, where our own cast iron and steel beast resides. Neat.

all aboard . . . or not

http://www.wcsh6.com/news/local/story.aspx?storyid=100966&catid=2

Coffee Review Gives Bird Dog High Marks

February 13th, 2009

cr_2009_90Hi folks,

We’re happy to report that Kenneth Davids at coffeereview.com recently scored Bird Dog at 90. The coffee was tested as an espresso, and was one of the highest scoring organic espresso blends in the last couple of years. From the review: “Subtle aroma: fruit, toast and nut. Full body, smooth mouthfeel and tight-knit, balanced flavors ranging from tart lemon to sweet cherry, with hints of caramel. Toasty sweetness in the finish turns toward cocoa in the long. Continued balanced complexity in milk, with distinct notes of cherry, nut and chocolate.”

Pretty cool. You can check out the review at www.coffeereview.com, under the “‘What’s Brewing/Recent Reviews” heading.

And sorry about the size of the medallion. We’re excited, but not THAT excited.

Also wanted to report that our stock of Ethiopia Korate is running low. If you want to order some, sooner is better.  The good news is that we have a really good 2007-8 late arrival Ethiopia natural as a replacement. It’s one of the coffees we’ve been using in Bird Dog, actually. More on that later.