Green Coffee Offerings : Central America : Honduras |
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View Our Current Honduran Coffees
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Upcoming Crop CommentsIn 2011 we had Cocosam as well as a very nice lot from San Vicente. We were very happy with our Cup of Excellence lot from Santa Barbara as well. We are looking forward to the same great offerings once new crop starts to hit in late May or June 2012 |
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About Honduran Coffee
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Honduran coffee had been absent from the top ranks of the specialty coffee market but that is changing. It has all the environmental factors on its side: soil, altitude, climate, and farmers increasingly better-trained in agricultural practices. All its neighbors have sophisticated coffee production: Guatemala, El Salvador and Nicaragua. But what has been lacking is good coffee processing and transporting, capital and a distinct "name" in the consumer market. It has been known mostly as a source for commercial coffee, not specialty. This means that even a good quality Honduran does not fetch a good price (and in fact many from Copan and Santa Barbara districts are smuggled into Guatemala and sold as such). Without a premium price for quality, the farmer, the mill and the exporter have no incentive to incur the added expense that would realize the coffee's potential. So Honduran coffee ends up as a good mild blender, and not as a single-origin or farm-specific coffee. It is a vicious cycle. In 2003, I was able to judge at the first Honduras Specialty Coffee Competition held in San Pedro Sula, and my ulterior motive on this trip was to find some truly special Honduran coffees for Sweet Maria's. That event was the precursor of the Cup of Excellence competitions, which have been held each year since then, and helped uncover high quality coffees in Honduras. For our part, we are buying really good coffees and paying way over Specialty prices. Honduras, like other origins, it is varied, so I can't speak about it as a single entity: coffees from Copan differ from Lempira or Santa Barbara or El Paraiso. In general, we have seen lower acidity from Hondurans lately and greater sweetness, which makes it a great choice as a Central American component in espresso. The largest growing region is Santa Barbara, as well as Copan, Ocotepeque, Lempira, La Paz and El Paraiso in the South. Coffee grown between 1500 and 2000 meters is given the highest designation of SHG; Strictly High Grown. The overall cup character is less acidic than other Central Americans, with distinct sweet caramel flavors in the cup. For more about Honduras, see my notes from that original 2003 Honduras Specialty Coffee Competition, and later my 2006 Honduras Cup of Excellence trip
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Our Unroasted Honduran Offerings:
Please refer to our Reference Page for definitions of terms and cupping numbers used below. Check out the Sweet Maria's Coffee Home Roasting Forum for more conversation about home roasting this and other coffees.We are currently out of stock. The review below is provided for your reference.
Honduras has great coffee ... the problem can often be getting it out of the country in good shape, and getting it shipped here promptly. It's ironic that one of the closest coffee origins to the US is one of the hardest in terms of logisitcs. Honduras has a long history of growing cheap arabica for quantity and price, not cup quality. All that is really changing due to the great efforts of NGO organizations, the Honduran government and the various quality initiatives such as Cup of Excellence. Here we have some of the results: a crisp, flavorful cup, light bodied and lively. This lot is produced by a co-op called COCOSAM (Cooperativa Cafetelera Sanmarquena) from the southwestern corner of Honduras. And the cup? There is an herbal-spice scent with anise and sasparilla character, and an aromatic wood suggestion, like cedar bark. The fragrance from the dry grounds and wet aroma are similar, and give a good sense of the cup flavors. The cup has an overall nutty tone (almond and almond skins), and silky mouthfeel ... for a Honduran coffee in particular. It has crisp brightness too, a red apple acidity. In the finish there's also a cocoa powder flavor, not overly sweet, but quite clearly defined. The nice tamarind note, cocoa, almond skin give the cup a slight rustic periphery, but the core flavor aspects are classic, delicate Central flavors all the way. Take it a bit darker (FC+) and the cup has a dark chocolate character with some nice fruited notes.
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We are currently out of stock. The review above is provided for your reference.
Archived Reviews
To view reviews for out of stock coffees, visit our Honduras Coffee Archives.
2005-2006 | 2004 -2003 | 2001-2002 | Pre-2000 Tom's Sample Cupping Log | Moisture Content Readings This page is authored
by Thompson Owen and Sweet Maria's Coffee, Inc. and is not to be
copied or reproduced without permission
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