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Scenery Coffee

Ethiopia - Gatta Honey

Ethiopia - Gatta Honey

Our penultimate Ethiopian release and our last lot for the year from Coffee Legends & the inimitable Daye Bensa PLC.

We had hoped to secure an Anoxic lot from Gatta early on in the year, but were thwarted at the last moment - however, this lot coming alongside Rumudamo more than made up for it. We think it's the perfect example of how a honey process can represent the best of both worlds of washed and natural.

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Brew Guide:

Best Brewed with: Filter

A broader spread of varieties - both JARC cultivars and landraces local to Bensa makes it a trickier lot to profile, but we’re excited with the first few batches so far. Very light, bright and high acidity

Best rested for: 3-4 weeks

For Filter: We recommend a ratio of 65g/L, 96°C water for more sticky stonefruit. 58g/L and 98°C, with a coarser grounds pushes florals.

For Espresso: 18g in, 50g out, 20-25s turbo-style shots are our preference for peak juice.

We’re tasting: Dried lemon & white grape aroma. In the cup, super zippy white wine (Gewurztraminer-esq) acids without any trace of booziness, candyfloss grape, meyer lemon, honeysuckle, nectarine, ultra-clean.

Traceability:

Country of Origin:

Ethiopia
Region:
Shantawene Village, Bensa, Sidama
Farm:
Gatta
Producer:

940 smallholder farmers selling cherry to Gatta (managed by Asefa Dukamo Korma), alongside production grown at Gatta itself.
Variety:
Primarily JARC 74158, alongside local landraces and JARC cultivars produced by the outgrowers that supply Gatta.
Elevation:
1920- 2210 MASL
Process:

Honey:

Ripe cherries picked and delivered to Gatta. Cherries floated to remove underripes and debris before pulping via an Ecopulper, with zero mucilage removal. The sticky, fruit-sugar covered parchment is then transferred to the drying beds, where some surface level wild yeast fermentation continues until the seeds are dried.

Daye Bensa's careful drying ensures that the parchment is covered during peak mid-day sun and moved fully under shade if the daytime temperature is too hot, which ensures the coffee has a stable shelf life and quality is locked in . Drying takes an average of 2-3 weeks, with defects removed by hand during this period.

Import Partner:
Coffee Legends via Daye Bensa
Harvest

Crop 23/24, Arrived UK: June 24

 

The Story

We’ve made a commitment to try and work with producer owned value chains wherever possible. This means that those that grow the coffee, also manage the exporting and importing process ensuring that the maximum value for our purchase is returned upstream. This means both working with smaller independent outfits, as well as larger operations. 

Daye Bensa was founded by two brothers - Asefa and Mulugeta in 1996, setting up a farm and washing station in the Bensa region of Sidama. Initially only selling internally (as Ethiopia has a strong internal market for coffee - around 50% of what is grown in Ethiopia never leaves its borders), in 2006 they started exporting coffee internationally. Since then, Daye Bensa has grown to be one of the top 5 largest international exporters by volume (and most assuredly higher by quality!) in Ethiopia, but still to this day family owned and based in-country. 

Atrie from Coffee Legends is Asefa’s brother in law - having worked as a manager for Daye Bensa, with a stint in finance in the UK, he took the leap to set up a UK import office for Daye Bensa, an exporter which eponymously first started with a single washing station (Qonqa'na)  in the Bensa Woreda of Sidama. 

Bensa is an area that sits right in the heart of the prime coffee growing lands in Sidama. The Shantawene village inside this Woreda has grown internationally famous for the coffees produced in this area - gaining early notoriety with the rise of third wave coffee, and likely due to no small part on behalf of the efforts of Asefa & Mulegeta.

Daye Bensa's Gatta Farm was first established with several areas of planting (with majority JARC improved cultivars) in 2013, with a processing and drying station built in 2017 once the trees had matured. The farm is integrated with natural old-growth forestry, and both grows and produces its own output as well as buying cherry from neighbouring smallholders for further onwards processing.

This mixture of established local landraces and improved cultivars grown on the farm (with the additional agricultural resources that a company like Daye Bensa can employ) ensures the quality coming out of Gatta is superlative. We’ll try and get that anoxic lot next year, but for now this honey lot has all the best characteristics of a washed Sidama (bright citrus and florals) alongside a natural (sticky, fruit-forward sweetness) - firmly ticking all the boxes and a coffee we’re thoroughly enjoying

Credit for additional farm & producer photography: Daye Bensa