Kenya Peaberry
Kenya Peaberry
Kenya’s are a favorite here at Fuzz and this coffee has been a home-run right out the gate. In the cup you’ll find a crisp, complex sweetness and acidity countered by a warm comforting spice. We highly recommend brewing it up as a pour over.
Region - Kainamui, Kirinyaga
Notes - Grapefruit, White Peach, Baking Spices
Process - Washed
Notes from the importer (Coffee Shrub): Kainamui is a "factory," a coffee mill in Kenya terminology, from the Kirinyaga growing district. This is where the farmers bring the coffee cherry they harvest in the local area for pulping, fermenting, and sun-drying. It is a cooperative coffee, one of two mills in the New Ngariama Farmers Cooperative Society, in the town of Kianyaga. While we have nothing against estate coffees, oftentimes the qualities from cooperatives is superior in Kenya. In a coop, each member is tending to only 200-500 trees on less than a hectare, as opposed to a huge estate that uses agribusiness growing methods. On its face, you might suspect that blending different coffees from hundreds of farms (sometimes more than a thousand!) might compromise quality in some way. But in many parts of East Africa where this model is prevalent (Kenya, Ethiopia, Rwanda, Burundi, for example), the exact opposite is true. We've been lucky enough to buy Kianamui outside the auction system a couple of times due to our relationship with a intermediary in the area.
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Kenya’s are a favorite here at Fuzz and this coffee has been a home-run right out the gate. In the cup you’ll find a crisp, complex sweetness and acidity countered by a warm comforting spice. We highly recommend brewing it up as a pour over.
Region - Kainamui, Kirinyaga
Notes - Grapefruit, White Peach, Baking Spices
Process - Washed
Notes from the importer (Coffee Shrub): Kainamui is a "factory," a coffee mill in Kenya terminology, from the Kirinyaga growing district. This is where the farmers bring the coffee cherry they harvest in the local area for pulping, fermenting, and sun-drying. It is a cooperative coffee, one of two mills in the New Ngariama Farmers Cooperative Society, in the town of Kianyaga. While we have nothing against estate coffees, oftentimes the qualities from cooperatives is superior in Kenya. In a coop, each member is tending to only 200-500 trees on less than a hectare, as opposed to a huge estate that uses agribusiness growing methods. On its face, you might suspect that blending different coffees from hundreds of farms (sometimes more than a thousand!) might compromise quality in some way. But in many parts of East Africa where this model is prevalent (Kenya, Ethiopia, Rwanda, Burundi, for example), the exact opposite is true. We've been lucky enough to buy Kianamui outside the auction system a couple of times due to our relationship with a intermediary in the area.
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