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Coffee

Yirgacheffe Gotiti

Overview

Notes Key Lime, Hibiscus, Mochi Varieties Ethiopia Landraces Elevation 2000-2100 masl Process Washed
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Description

The arrival of fresh crop Ethiopia is truly a time of celebration for us at Variety, and across the coffee industry at large. Welcoming the coming of spring with these beautiful, marvelously complex profiles awakens something fundamental in our love and connection to them. This past January, we had the great privilege of traveling to the birthplace of coffee for the first time. Even within the abundance of unique coffees we've come to know and love each year...we discovered something very special: Yirgacheffe Gotiti. It is the quintessential representation of what we first fell in love with; layers of wild florals, juicy stone fruits and berries, elegant aromas, and superior balance.

Background

Ethiopia’s Yirgacheffe region is one of the best-known coffee-producing regions in the world. Like the rest of Ethiopia, it’s divided into several woredas (districts) and kebeles (communities) with washing stations throughout—each offering unique terroir. The Gedeb woreda is one of them, and within it lies the Gotiti kebele. Farmers here transport their coffee via mule or on foot to the washing station in Gotiti. This washing station started in 2023 on 2.5 hectares of land, currently processing an annual total volume between 500–600 tons of clean green coffee. 868 farmers from 7 villages deliver cherry to this washing station. To maintain traceability along with quality, they’re careful about lot separation. They collect coffee cherry alongside supplier name, original location, and quantity and keep thorough records as the coffee moves through processing.

The people of Gotiti belong to the Gedeo cultural tradition and speak various dialects of the Gedeo language. Their main income source is coffee, which they grow on very small farms ranging from 0.1 to 2 hectares. Many intercrop with false banana trees and acacias as shade for the coffee trees. Although formal fertilizer use is rare in this area, acacia trees are leguminous and fix nitrogen in the soil. Life isn’t easy for Gotiti producers, but they still have a lot working in their favor. They live in a gorgeous, communal village within a very lush forest. This forest, the altitude of the area, and the indigenous varieties that grow here create the perfect environment for smaller, tastier coffee beans with distinct, elegant, and floral profiles.

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