Friday, 4 October 2024

Ethiopia

 Ethiopia's most renowned coffee-producing regions are Sidamo, Yirgacheffe, and Harrar, which are government-trademarked for their unique flavour profiles. 
Sidamo offers a wide range of floral, citrus, and tea-like notes.
Yirgacheffe is known for its delicate, complex fruity and floral notes with a tea-like body,
 and Harrar coffee is distinguished by its rich, winey, and blackberry-like flavours and distinct acidity.

Other significant regions include Guji, producing bright, clean, and fruity coffees, and Kaffa, the historical birthplace of coffee and known for its smooth, black tea notes.  

Here is a breakdown of the key Ethiopian coffee regions:

The Trademarked Regions
Sidamo: Located in the south, these beans are known for their vibrant, clean, and complex flavour profiles, with common notes of lemon, citrus, and floral tones. 
Yirgacheffe: A sub-region of Sidamo, Yirgacheffe produces intensely aromatic coffees with bright, sweet, and delicate flavours, often described as citrusy, fruity, and tea-like. 
Harrar: From the Eastern Highlands, Harrar coffee has a distinct winey, fruity, and bold flavour with hints of blackberry and a floral acidity. 

Other Prominent Regions
Guji: Another region within the southern Sidamo zone, Guji is known for bright, clean, and fruity flavour profiles. 
Kaffa: The historical origin of coffee, Kaffa produces smooth coffee with notes of citrus, black tea, and lavender. 
Limu: Located in the western highlands, Limu coffee is recognized for its balanced acidity, medium body, and sweet, floral notes with hints of spice and citrus. 
Djimma (Jimma): Known for dry-processed coffees, Djimma beans have a fruity flavour with notes of cocoa and tea. 
------------------------------------------------

Many Ethiopian coffees are processed using the natural (dry) method, where the coffee cherry dries on the seed. This allows the fruit's sugars to infuse into the bean—creating that signature blueberry, strawberry, and jammy richness specialty coffee lovers crave.

You may have heard the term, "blueberry bomb".
the coffee cherries are dried whole (with the fruit skin/mucilage) rather than being washed first. 
roastcoffee. One example often described as a “blueberry bomb” comes from the Bombe area (Sidama region).

During this process, sugars and fruit compounds from the cherry can infuse into the bean, creating deep, fruity, “berry” flavor characteristics — blueberry being a particularly common descriptor.
Other fruit notes: raspberry, strawberry, sometimes dark berries. Roasters often roast these beans light to medium-light, to preserve the delicate fruit aromatics.
Popular brewing methods to highlight blueberry notes: pour-over (V60, Chemex), French press, Aeropress

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Coffee index. Click here :

No comments:

Post a Comment