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MERAKI Artisan Coffee

Kenya Ndundu AA كينيا اندندو

Kenya Ndundu AA كينيا اندندو

Regular price 104.34 SAR
Regular price Sale price 104.34 SAR
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Net Weight 250g  الوزن الصافي ٢٥٠ جرام

 

 

Blackberry | Raspberry | Sparkling Lime

 

Farm: Ndundu Factory

Varietal: Sl28, SL34 & some Ruiru 11 & Batian

Processing: Fully washed & dried on raised beds

Altitude: 1,600 to 1,900 metres above sea level

Owner: Approx. 800 members deliver to washing station; FCS=Approx. members 2,400 active

Town / City: Kiganjo

Region: Kiambu County

Country: Kenya


الإيحاءات:  توت اسود | توت احمر | حمضيات


المزرعة: مزارع صغيرة متعددة

السلالة: اس ال ٢٨, اس ال ٣٤, رويرا ١١

المعالجة: مغسولة

الارتفاع: ١,٦٠٠ - ١,٩٠٠ متر فوق سطح البحر

المزارع: مزارعين مختلفين

المدينة: كيكانجو

المنطقة: كيامبو

البلد: كينيا

The Story Behind This Coffee

The Ndundu Factory is located in the Central Highlands of Kenya sharing a border with Nakuru and Kajiado to the West, Murang’a and Nyandarua to the North and Nairobi to the South. Mills in Kenya are known as factories. Together with a few other factories, Ndundu is part of the Thiririka Farmers Cooperative Society founded in 1996. The name is derived from the Thiririka river flowing nearby. Additionally, the word Ndundu is a local kikuyu word for agreement, which influences the community members to work together.


Members of the Cooperative are required to purchase seeds from the Kenya Coffee Research Institute, whilst adhering to specific rules and guidelines for planting and cultivation. A field committee visits each farm to maintain these standards and provides support to producers. The factory also employs a specific “Cherry Clerk” to inspect every delivery of cherries to ensure that the utmost quality is taken in for processing.


The coffee is grown throughout the region on healthy deep red volcanic soils high in nutrients and organic matter. This soil is ideal for coffee production and give the trees the necessary resources to allocate energy to high-quality coffee production.


Harvest generally occurs amongst the cooperative members between October and December. In some cases, early crop can be harvested between April and July.
The coffee trees are carefully monitored and picking ensues only when the cherry is at the ideal level of ripeness. Picking occurs in the morning and buckets of bright red coffee cherries are carried to the mill. As the sun traverses across the sky into the afternoon, the cherries are piled high as underripe cherries and foreign objects are removed from the gleaming pile. The cherries are then poured into a hopper located just above the pulping station.


From here, clean water is drawn upwards and directed into the hopper to cover the coffee cherries. This force pushes the cherries down a chute into the pulping house. Here, the outer pulp is removed thanks to the work of two rotating abrasive slabs. The de-pulped coffee is then moved via the force of a water channel towards a fermentation tank. Along the way, floaters, or lower quality coffee beans, are removed to ensure only the highest quality continue along the process. The denser beans are funnelled through a hole where they land into a fermentation tank to rest for the evening.


The following morning, workers assess the feel of the sticky mucilage remaining on the coffee. If it has reached the ideal level, water is placed over the beans to give them a final wash. From here, sluice gates open to move the coffee into washing channels where the coffee slides down a gently sloping tiled channel. Wooden shunts used by workers are manually placed into the coffee to separate the denser beans from the lighter beans.


Next, the coffee is evenly dispersed onto raised tables, under careful surveillance. If it is too sunny, or rain is in the forecast, the parchment is carefully covered. Moisture is regulated until the target of 10-12% is reached. The parchment is bagged up and transported to the dry mill.


After being hulled, the coffee rests and is soon filled into 60kg hermetically lined Jute export bags.


Screen sizing in Kenya
The AA, AB and other grades used to classify lots in Kenya are an indication of screen size only. They are not any indication of cup quality. The AA grade in Kenya is equivalent to screen size 17 or 18 (17/64 or 18/64 of an inch) used at other origins. AA grades often command higher prices at auction though this grade is no indication of cup quality and an AB lot from a better farm may cup better.

AA Ichamara Kenya

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