Friday, May 2, 2008

Idido Misty Valley Yirgacheffe and Harrar Bagersh Arrived

I just recieved shipment of two of the most anticipated coffee's this year. Look for them to be added soon to our offerings. If you have not experienced exceptional Ethiopian coffee now is your chance. IMO Ethiopian coffee is the best, and these examples represent the best of the best.

Idido Misty Valley Yigacheffe natural process (Bagersh)
Location: Ethiopia Yirgacheffe
Cert: Organic
Varietal: traditional
Altitude: 1850-2100 meters
Harvest Season: October - January
Crop: 08

Cupping notes and score:
dry-4.5 Strawberry, Blueberry, sweet, fruity
wet-4.3 strawberry, blueberry
flavor-9.3 Strawberry,blueberry, fruity, citrus, clean
acid-7.9 incredible high notes
body-7.5 very even
aftertaste-8.9 Berry Flavors remain, citrus notes in the finish
total+50= 92.4

Ethiopia Harrar (Bagersh)
Region: harrar
I have an inquiry in for the rest of the bean biography.
Cupping Notes and score:
dry-4.4 Blueberry maple syrup
wet-4.4 same
flavor-8.9 blueberry, maple syrup, earthy
acid-7.4
body-7.8
aftertaste-8.8 earthy blueberries
total+50= 91.7

Thursday, May 1, 2008

So the Family decided to do a goofy Kung-Fu Parody in response to some bantering between myself and Shaun Taylor at GCBC. As you can clearly see he is no match for the Sandpiper Coffee Clan!!

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Gayo Mountain Sumatra Coffee is Coming


I should be getting one my favorite coffee's in the next few days. Sumatra Gayo Mountain (Organic Fair Trade). this is a special coffee that has immense body like most Sumatra's but also avoids the dirty and mossy flavors associated with the region. It replaces the Dirt and moss with spice and Citrus along with other more pleasant flavors. Plus look at the bag it comes in! I love the elephant. Anyways if you haven't looked around the site lately take a peek some of my favorites have gone and new ones have popped up and more are coming. In other words, the offering sheet is in a constant state of change.

Joe

Friday, November 30, 2007

Recent Cupping session

I had a few coffee's to cup for http://www.greencoffeebuyingclub.com/ . Phil had heard of the planned session and decided to make a visit. We sampled some Brazilian coffees, a Yemen, a Bolivian, and one from Papua New Guinea. Phil was kind enough to bring some Panamanian boquete coffee. The Panama boquete was simply amazing and I am in the process of trying to acquire some for Sandpiper coffee in the near future. Here is a picture of Phil jotting sown some scores after he sampled one of the many coffees.

If you are in the San Diego area and would like to learn more about cupping coffee or if you would like to experience cupping coffee, feel free to contact me at my email: info@sandpipercoffee.net

Monday, November 19, 2007

Ethiopian Yirgacheffe coming soon

I have reserved some Ethiopian Yirgacheffe from the Oromia coop. This is a wonderful bean I should be recieving cupping samples soon, I will post my scores and results and if it is acceptable we will have some long awaited Yirgacheffe back in stock. The Decaf coming in the next couple weeks will be a Panama Decaf from the Carmen Estate, I have had this same coffee in its non decaf form and I can't wait to see the translation.

Joe

Saturday, November 17, 2007

Dacaf is coming

I have been getting periodic requests for decaf coffee. The problem with decaffeinated coffee is that the processing shortens the shelf life considerably. This problem is regardless of the type of processing. Since I am just a micro roaster at the moment, I don't have the volume of Decaf customers to justify purchasing bags of it and potentially risk having quality issues. So a solution has presented itself that I can get smaller quantities of Decaf coffee soon. Stay tuned!

Joe

Wednesday, November 7, 2007

Oromia coop Ethiopian Harar November's Hot Bean




This month I will focus on one of my all time favorite coffee's Oromia coop Ethiopia Harar. Traditionally Harar has wonderful Blueberry notes along with some earthiness and in the case of Oromia its very common to get Licorice root flavors along with some raw honey/Maple. This years crop upon initial cupping disappointed me in that my favorite flavor trait is the blueberry and this seemed to be significantly less than in previous years. Upon accidentally allowing this coffee to "rest" a few more days than I usually allow for, I was able to find the elusive blueberry flavors that make Harar one of the best coffee's for the absolute best value. Of course, I try and focus on Fair Trade organic and other socially conscious certified coffee's so that does eat away at some of the cheaper value's that most roasters enjoy. Fortunately the extra money that I pay for Oromia Coop coffee is well worth it, I truly feel they provide a superior coffee consistently year to year. I have said this before and I'll repeat it here if I had to choose only one coffee region to drink for the rest of my life it would be Ethiopian coffee hands down.




Here is the Bean Bio from Elan Organic:



Ethiopia
Harrar, Yirgacheffe &
Lekempti
Historically, Ethiopia is the oldest recognized country of origin
and Ethiopia is the birthplace of coffee. In 1960, Ethiopia became
a member of the Inter-African Coffee Organization. Elan’s Organic Ethiopian coffees come from
a farmer group called Oromia Coffee Farmers Cooperative Union (OCFCU), which was
founded in June 1999. OCFCU is a union of 34 small cooperatives benefiting 22,734 smallholder
farmer members.
Three major farming systems are recognized and practiced; Forest Coffee which grows under a
forest canopy with very little human interface, Small Farm/Cottage Coffee, the most prevalent,
comes from small farms and is shade grown and often intercropped, and Plantation Coffee,
which is the system that utilized modern coffee planting and processing practices.
Coffee in this southwest region is known, as the Highland Coffee with average altitude of 1,750
meters.
Coffee Specifications:
Variety: Arabica
Grade: Strictly Hard Bean
Altitude: Yigacheffe: 1770-2200meters
Harrar: 1510-2120 meters
Lekempti: 1700-2200 meters
Shade: Traditional Polyculture
Harvest: Yirgacheffe: September-February
Harrar: October-February
Lekempti: February-August
Certifications: USDA/NOP/TransFair USA
Coffee Characteristics:
Quality:
Harrar: Medium to light acidity, full body, genuine mocha flavor with blueberry notes
Lekempti: Good acidity, medium body, fruity finishes
Yirgacheffe: Bright acidity, citrus flavor, medium body, floral and spicy notes


info provided by: Elan Organic coffee