Papua New Guinea

Sloane Coffee

For February’s box, we're taking you on a journey to Bucharest, Romania, to introduce Sloane Coffee. We’re experiencing three coffees from three different parts of the world. A washed Kenyan, a natural from Papua New Guinea, and a 72h lychee anaerobic co-fermentation from Colombia.

Kariaini AA from Sloane Coffee

Tasting box coffees featuring Sloane Coffee

KARIAINI AA

Origin: Kenya
Process: Fully washed
Altitude: 1750 - 1850 masl
Varieties: Batman, Ruiru 11, SL28
Tasting notes: Pomegranate, Black currant, Blood orange, Acai berry

Kenyan coffee is renowned for its distinctive flavor profile, boasting bright, juicy flavors and high acidity. This unique character is shaped by the country's exceptional combination of soil, climate, and altitude, providing the ideal conditions for coffee cultivation. The grading of Kenyan coffee is based on bean size. AA beans, the largest at over 7.2 millimeters, are followed by AB beans (6 to 7 millimeters), and C beans, the smallest. This washed coffee has notes of pomegranate, black currant, blood orange and acai berry.


KINDENG

Only in the 2x250g and Tasting box

Origin: Papua New Guinea
Process: Natural
Altitude: 1520 - 1770 masl
Varieties: Arusha, Bourbon, Typica
Tasting notes: Baked berries, raisins, molasses, milk candy; heavy body

This coffee comes from the Kindeng Dry Mill, located in the Jikawa province of Papua New Guinea. The average farm size of producers in this area is about 1-2 hectares, and the soil is generally sandy loam and loamy clay. Naturally-processed coffees from Papua New Guinea are quite rare. When it comes to this process, only the ripest cherries are used as the amount of time necessary to dry these coffees fully is extensive. After cherries are harvested, they are hand sorted and placed on raised beds for an average period of 3-4 weeks until fully dried. 

JAIRO ARCILA LYCHEE

Only in the Tasting box

Origin: Colombia
Process: 72H Lychee Anaerobic Co-Fermentation
Altitude: 1450 - 1500 masl
Varieties: Castillo
Tasting notes: Lychee, vanilla, papaya, tuberose, lemongrass

This coffee was grown by Jairo Arcila at the farm Santa Mónica. It was exposed to a dry anaerobic fermentation period of 72 hours with the pulp on. During this fermentation stage, lychee and wine yeast were added. The cherries were then pulped and placed to dry on raised beds until ideal moisture content was achieved. This microlot is 100% Castillo, a variety that was developed by Federación Nacional de Cafeteros. Jairo Arcila is a third-generation coffee grower from Quindio, Colombia.


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Muttley & Jack's

We couldn’t be happier about the roaster in September’s box. Muttley & Jack’s from Stockholm, Sweden, brings some poppin’ coffees for you to enjoy. We had a chat!

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Who are Muttley & Jack’s and how come you started roasting coffee?

Muttley is a three year old Boston Terrier (@muttley.the.boss on Instagram) and I'm a 30-something year old Irish/Swedish hybrid. Together we have a micro-roastery on Rindö - an island in the Stockholm archipelago. I do the heavy lifting and Muttley injects the social media with a bit of cuteness and gives a little bark to indicate his approval when we produce a great roast profile.

We started roasting out of curiosity, to get to know coffee on a deeper level and the desire to master a craft.

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We heard about your previous work within humanitarian and environmental organizations. How does this experience impact your work?

It's true! I spent a long time working with non-profit organisations and although I've switch over to the business side of things I still hold the same values of sustainability, transparency and humanitarianism that drove me during those years. It means that we don't focus on profit above everything like many businesses and although we are starting out slowly we want to build a business that grows slowly, carefully and sustainably and shares the benefits with everyone involved from seed to cup.

You’ve won quite some prices for your coffee roasting skills. What’s your philosophy when roasting and competing?

We enter competitions with the philosophy that it's an opportunity to learn and improve. A competition forces one to re-evaluate decisions you might usually make when roasting, and to examine any prejudices you might have about how things should be done. Preparing for a competition means I'm trying out new ideas and experimenting with various aspects of roasting. Sometimes the experiments are a flop, but sometimes they result in an improvement or a new insight. It's also great to meet and learn from other competitors - speciality roasters are more like colleagues than competitors, eager to share and help each other.

We noticed on your website that you’re open for internships. Who is eligible to apply and what will the internship be like? Maybe some of our subscribers are interested in learning how to roast coffee :-)

It's open to anyone and everyone, but ideally someone who can be available for at least eight weeks. It's three days per week and a mix of helping out with tasks around the roastery, taking part in cupping and quality control, and following a special project agreed upon by all parties over the internship period - for some it might be learning from scratch how to roast, for others it might be improving their roasting, or it could even be on other non-roasting aspects of the business such as creating workshops or running a digital marketing project.

Do you have a brewing recipe that you would like to share?

I'm all about the v60 and roast all of our coffees to taste great in this recipe:

· 31g coffee - ground medium/fine
· 500 ml filtered tap water at 94 degrees
· Rinse the filter paper
· Bloom 60g water for 40 seconds
· At 40 seconds add another 140g water for 30 seconds, swirl the v60.
· At 1:20 add another 200g water for 30 seconds
· At 2:00 pour the final 100g water.

Many of our subscribers will try your coffee for the first time. What can they expect from the three featured coffees of this month (Baroida, Wolichu Wachu, and Nyakizu), and why are they special to you?

I roast only coffees that I love and so each of the three coffees are special to me in their own way. Rwanda is especially meaningful as it is the first coffee producing country that I ever visited and it was there that I walked among coffee trees for the first time. The coffees from the southern province are so elegant and smooth - the Nyakizu has citrus, black tea and a complex elegance that I appreciate in a cup. Ethiopia is also a special origin for a coffee roaster - it's where all the world's coffee began and thousands of heirloom coffees still grow wild in the rainforests there. I love the Wolichu Wachu because it so clearly has the blueberry flavour notes so characteristic of the Guji region - the natural process adds sweetness and a little funk, making it taste of stewed blueberry which is a perfect autumn note. I love the Baroida from Papua New Guinea as it challenges our preconceptions about Asian coffee - coffee from this part of the world is generally thought to be more inclined to have spicy or tobacco notes - the Baroida is all about fruit and flowers - with tons of orange citrus and even gorgeous elderflower notes.

September’s box featuring Muttley & Jack’s included the following coffees ⚡️

Baroida

Origin: Papua New Guinea
Process: Washed
Altitude: 1700 - 1850 MASL
Varieties: Arusha & Bourbon
Tasting notes: ”Refreshing notes of elderflower and orange zest and the sweetness of lemonade in a medium bodied coffee.”

We are delighted to have a coffee from Papua New Guinea in this month’s box! It it the second time in Bean Portal’s history that we feature a coffee from this very special island nation. Baroida is a third-generation family-run farm, that has been producing coffee since the 1960s, from the Eastern Highlands of the country. This is a refreshing coffee with notes of elderflower and orange zest, and it is just as good hot as it is on ice. Enjoy!

Wolichu Wachu

Origin: Ethiopia
Process: Natural
Altitude: 1900 - 2210 MASL
Varieties: Heirloom
Tasting notes: ”A gentle ‘funk’ from the mild fermentation of this natural coffee. Fruit derived sweet notes of blueberry, red cherry and stone fruits. Medium to creamy bodies with a pleasant lingering aftertaste.”

Wolichu Wachu is a relatively new washing station in Guji, Ethiopia, that started operations in 2017. It was built to process specialty coffee, which explains the deliciousness of this coffee. Fresh from harvest, this coffee was picked Feb-April this year. The natural process gives it the blueberry notes, accompanied by red cherry and stone fruit. You will also find a funkiness of this coffee, coming from the mild fermentation.

And our Tasting box™ subscribers also received 💥


Nyakizu

Origin: Rwanda
Process: Washed
Altitude: 1750 - 2100 MASL
Varieties: Bourbon
Tasting notes: ”Sparkling acidity, delicate black tea characteristics with notes of sweet lime and brown sugar.”

The high altitudes and rich soils of south Rwanda, combined with plenty of rainfall, creates an ideal place for growing great coffee. This is where the Nyakizu washing station is located, next to the Nyungwe natural forest, right at the border to Burundi. Rwanda is one of our favourite coffee countries, and this one does not disappoint us. Expect black tea characteristics with notes of sweet lime and brown sugar. 


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