| Received 6/29/2009
NOTE: This is an intense, clean, shocking classic.
If you enjoyed the Bali Blue Krishna, this is your cup of coffee!
Harvested just north of Lake Tawar in the Bener Meriah region from old coffee trees, this Sumatra is labeled by the growers as an authentic "Retro Classico".
Grown in the sweet black volcanic earth, this coffee delivers a rich and buttery cup that amazes with it's powerful, unmistakably strong body. Also noteworthy is the unusually large bean size.
A "well-endowed" Indonesian in every way, this is one of the biggest, baddest beans we've handled in a long time!
Sumatran coffees are processed in a unique way. From the point the coffee is picked and the cherry skin pulped off, the process follows the way it is done for most washed coffees produced around the world. As with these other washed coffees, fermentation is complete when the mucilage or fruit surrounding the parchment (or pergamino) has dissolved and the fruit-free parchment rinsed off. At this point, the bean within the parchment still has very high moisture content.
In almost all washed coffee origins throughout the world, before the parchment is hulled, it is dried, either in the sun or in machine dryers, until the moisture content is down to around 15-13% at this point the coffee is ready to ship, store and roast.
So herein lies the difference; in most places, the bean is dried in the parchment and the parchment or pergamino is milled off the beans when they are dry… not in Sumatra.
In Sumatra, the bean is still very wet when the parchment is hulled. The bean comes out of the parchment quite soft, white, and spongy. These wet soft beans are then sundried. Typically, the drying conditions in Sumatra include on-and-off sessions of fierce tropical sun, interrupted regularly by torrential thunder showers. This slow inconsistent drying is in large part what provides the essence of a Sumatra Mandheling, both in flavor and appearance. |