
Brew Guide:
Best Brewed with: Espresso, but can make a chunky filter
Medium Roaster Influence: A low and slow approach is always our way to go for Brazil espresso - and it's no less the same for our decaf. Much longer stretched development but without a high end temp (so a very carefully managed rate-of-rise) leads a sweet and sticky dense cup.
Best Rested: 2+ weeks
Filter: We recommend a ratio of 65g/L and 90°C water
Espresso: 18g in, 40g out, 28-32s for a classic style of espresso.
We're tasting: Very rich and gently fruity in the cup with black espresso - we're finding yellow plum, dried apple, dried fig and pomegranate molasses, sitting on a rich base of biscuit + chocolate + nuts + a gooeyness that reminds us of Rocky road. In Milk, the fruity note is rounded off, and we think it tastes like peanut butter cups.
Traceability
Country of Origin: |
Brazil |
Region: |
Mantiqueira, Minas Gerais |
Producer: |
Rafael Fagundes, Rosimeire Aparecida Guerra, Natália Moreira Brito |
Farm: |
Field Blend (Sítio São Joaquim, Sítio Vargem Grande, Sítio Toca da Jaguara) |
Variety: |
Mundo Novo, Catuai, Arara |
Elevation: |
1040 - 1300 MASL |
Process: |
Traditional Natural / E.A Decaf: Ripe cherries picked and dried at each individual smallholders farm, each lot was first quality controlled before selection to be built into a larger regional blend during the milling process. Once exported, this lot was sent for “E.A Process” (Sugarcane) decaffeination by Coffein Compagnie in Bremen, Germany. |
Import Partner: |
Nordic Approach |
Harvest: |
25/26 - Arrived UK: 08/06/26. New Purchasing Relationship |
The Story
Mantiqueira Collective is a communal lot brought together annually from a small, consistent group of producers Nordic Approach works with in the Mantiqueira de Minas region, coordinated through Natália Moreira Brito. This year's contributors are Rafael Fagundes of Sítio São Joaquim in Natércia, Rosimeire Aparecida Guerra of Sítio Vargem Grande in Lambari, and Natália herself, of Sítio Toca da Jaguara in Cambuquira. The region sits on the Minas Gerais face of the Serra da Mantiqueira, recognised as a Denominação de Origem since 2020, with a landholding structure that tends toward smaller, family-run farms rather than the larger, mechanised estates found further north in Brazil. Building a blend of this kind allows the group to smooth out variation between individual farms and, more importantly, gives producers a reliable outlet for volume that would otherwise be difficult to place lot by lot, while making it easier for smaller, higher-scoring parcels from the same farms to be sold on their own merits elsewhere.
This particular lot was bought during a period of unusually high domestic pricing in Brazil, a consequence of a reduced arabica harvest and a period of currency movement that pushed farmgate prices to levels rarely seen in the face of record C price highs. The blend was bought at BRL 2550 per 60kg bag, working out to around 10.25USD/kg FOB ("Free on Board" - the incoterm for when coffee is loaded onto the ship at port), in order for Nordic tp stay within the buying plan and to support continued purchasing from Natália's group, Toca da Jaguara in particular. We really respect that Nordic have kept buying even in the face of existentially high prices that severely damped demand for Brazilian blender lots - and it was a smart move to realise that a value reposition via decaffeination would work well for these (relatively) harder to move lots booked in a high market.
One of the reasons we really enjoy E.A decaf is that is has a signature "tropical" flavour (all decafs taste, to a greater or lesser degree, of the process - we definitely have a subjective preference amongst them, being kind). When we think of caff "blender" Brazil - we think of nutty, sweet, low acid cups that can be deeply moreish if a little (intentionally) "boring". But with the E.A process, the decaf tropicality really adds a lot to the cup in a cohesive and enjoyable way.
The coffee was shipped to Coffein Compagnie in Bremen, Germany for decaffeination using naturally derived ethyl acetate - a compound naturally found in many fruits and as a by-product of fermentation, and most typically synthesised by esterising Ethanol (a byproduct of sugarcane fermentation in Colombia, and likely sugar-beet in germany) and acetic acid (vinegar). The EA process steams coffee to open cellular pores in the green coffee before extraction over 8 hours using the ethyl acetate to selectively remove caffeine, preserving over 95% of original volatile compounds whilst achieving 97-98% caffeine removal.
Our first time purchasing Brazilian decaf, we're using this lot to reset our seasonal cycle and explore new decaf origins - we're been thoroughly satisfied with how nice it is.
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