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Cherry Sours

Cherry Sours

Regular price £23.00
Regular price Sale price £23.00
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  • Colombia

Cherry, Hibiscus, Rose Buds

Rodrigo Sanchez treats fermentation like an art form. At Finca El Eden, 1,500 metres up in Palestina's Samaria district, year-round flowering gives him constant opportunities to experiment. His awards back it up: 1st place with Pink Bourbon, podiums with Purple Caturra. This lot blends Bourbon and high-Brix Purple Caturra with a fermentation process that's beyond what we've worked with previously.

Before the coffee cherry arrives, Rodrigo builds a starter culture, comprising of ten yeasts and bacteria, including Lactobacillus and Saccharomyces, fed with blackberry, strawberry, and panela sugar. After fermenting for 150 hours, the pulped coffee joins for another 150. The result is notes of cherry, hibiscus, and rose buds, crafting what we deem an unforgettable cup of microbiology merged with coffee.

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Region
Huila:Samaria, Palestina, Finca El Eden
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Varietal
Bourbon, Purple Caturra
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Altitude
1500 masl
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Producer
Rodrigo Sánchez
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Process
Extended Fermentation Fully washed
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Harvest
25/26
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ABOUT

Rodrigo Sanchez treats fermentation like an art form. Finca El Eden is perched at 1,500 metres above sea level in Palestina's Samaria district. Here, coffee is engineered through curiousity and precision, to create a cup that embodies quality on all fronts.

The farm sits in a pocket of Colombia that coffee loves. Annual rainfall of 1,800 to 2,000 mm and ideal environmental conditions create all year round flowering - something rare within coffee production, where most farms get one harvest. This continuous cycle provides Rodrigo with endless opportunities to experiment. His awards are testament to his practice: 1st place with Pink Bourbon at Yara Champion 2017, 2nd place with Pink Bourbon in 2018, and both 1st and 3rd with Purple Caturra at Roasters United 2019.

This lot blends Bourbon and Purple Caturra. The choice of Purple Caturra is deliberate: when measured on Brix meters, it consistently reads higher in sugar content than its red cousin. More sugar means more fuel for fermentation, and a richer playground for the microorganisms Rodrigo carefully curates.

Before any coffee is processed, Rodrigo builds a microbial starter culture: ten different yeasts and bacteria, including Lactobacillus and Saccharomyces, selected with intention. Into this goes blackberry, strawberry, and a sugar-rich base of molasses or panela, the unrefined whole cane sugar that microbes thrive on. The mixture is sealed and fermented for 150 hours. Over six days, a living, active culture develops within this controlled environment.

Meanwhile, cherry is selectively hand-picked, floated, and visually sorted to remove anything underripe or damaged. Only then is it pulped and introduced to the fermented mixture, where it stays for another 150 hours. After its long soak, the parchment is washed and moved to parabolic drying beds. For 20 to 25 days, it's raked frequently, drying slowly and evenly. What emerges is notes of cherry, hibiscus, and rose buds. The result is notes of cherry, hibiscus, and rose buds, crafting what we deem an unforgettable cup of microbiology merged with coffee.

Brew Guide

BREW METHOD

Batch brew/V60

DOSE

DOSE

55g/27.5g

TIME

TIME

5-6 mins/3-4 mins

YIELD

YIELD

1L/500ml

METHOD

We recommend a pour over brewed at 93 degrees.

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ETHICAL COFFEE SOURCING

Just like our approach to roasting and training, we source coffee in such a way that prioritises empowering people who are disadvantaged or disenfranchised.

Every sourcing decision is made intentionally in order to maximise the impact for the producers.
We focus these decisions around 3 main principles:

REHABILITATION

In line with our mission in the UK, we support the rehabilitation of coffee producers previously involved in conflict, crime or the drug trade. We’ve been working with a project in Colombia which supports farmers who were previously members of paramilitary groups, and want to move away from growing illegal plants for the drugs industry and instead produce coffee. This allows them to have a steady, sustainable income which provides for their family and creates stability within their community.

12%

of our purchased coffee

Sustainable Initiatives

Economic and environmental sustainability are important issues at every stage of the coffee supply chain.

We work with Caravela, who on top of paying farmers up front, have an on-the-ground team to work with farmers improving their farm yield and reduce carbon emissions.

We also work closely with Raw Material CIC, who reinvest all profits at origin.

54%

of our purchased coffee

Female Economic Empowerment

We support the promotion of female coffee producers to improve gender equality in the industry. In an industry where women do most of the labour but rarely hold positions of power, we want to help reset the balance. We’ve built a relationship with Patricia Coelho, a female producer in The Pinhal Region in Brazil, to create our house espresso blend, The Block. We now do a lot of business with Patrica, giving her the capital to invest in producing better and better coffee and thereby access the speciality market. 2023 marks our third year working with Patricia.

31%

of our purchased coffee