Mexico Oaxaca FTO -Medium Dark

from $18.00

This Mexico Oaxaca Fair Trade organic is a stand out! Nice body and mouthfeel, sweet and well rounded, leaving a nice lime citrus note as the finishing touch on the palate.

Flavor Notes: Fig, brown sugar, citrus

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This Mexico Oaxaca Fair Trade organic is a stand out! Nice body and mouthfeel, sweet and well rounded, leaving a nice lime citrus note as the finishing touch on the palate.

Flavor Notes: Fig, brown sugar, citrus

This Mexico Oaxaca Fair Trade organic is a stand out! Nice body and mouthfeel, sweet and well rounded, leaving a nice lime citrus note as the finishing touch on the palate.

Flavor Notes: Fig, brown sugar, citrus

ORIGIN INFORMATION

Grower

Coordinadora Estatal de Productores de Café del Estado de Oaxaca (CEPCO)

Variety

Bourbon, Caturra, Catuai, Mundo Novo and Typica

Region

Oaxaca, Mexico

Harvest

October – March

Altitude

900 – 1700 meters

Soil

Clay minerals

Process

Fully washed and dried in the sun

Certifications

Fair Trade, Organic

Imagine starting at sea level in the popular Mexican beach destination of Puerto Escondido and traveling along progressively steeper and curvier roads through villages, where the local population still wears traditional indigenous clothing, eventually arriving at a lush tropical forest intercropped with coffee, bananas, corn, beans, fruit trees, and views of the Pacific Ocean in the distance below. This is the Oaxacan coffee growing region where the Sierra Madre del Sur coastal mountain range is peppered with small family farms, each consisting of just a few acres of land. Nearly forty percent of the producers are women who rely on coffee income to support their families. Producers here continue to identify with their indigenous roots using organic practices to manage their farms and protect their environment. They harvest cherries, then depulp, ferment, wash, and dry the coffee using their own micro-mills. While these producers are their own architects, designing farm management and post-harvest solutions to fit their needs, they need strong alliances to bring their coffee to the international market and earn fair prices. In Oaxaca, more than 4,000 producers from 134 communities and 45 producer associations have consolidated their efforts into an umbrella cooperative called Coordinadora Estatal de Productores de Café del Estado de Oaxaca (CEPCO), which carries out activities that are often overlooked but crucial to small producers. For example, CEPCO has helped producers gain access to credit and certifications. CEPCO has also led the leaf rust recovery effort, helping thousands of producers renovate their farms and increase their production of organic fertilizers. Investments for basic infrastructure needs, like road improvements, establishing local warehouses, and dry-mill facilities are also coordinated through CEPCO. Their collective efforts have established higher prices and more producer income to support best agricultural practices and an improved livelihood.species and 390 bird species that make their home in El Triunfo. Each producer processes coffee with their own micro-wet mills and dry the coffee in the sun on patios before transporting the coffee in parchment nearby warehouses. In addition to providing local warehouses to ease the burden of transportation costs to producers, CESMACH has also recently invested in building a centrally located dry mill facility where the coffee is prepared for export, which ensures full control of traceability and quality control throughout the post-harvest process.
— Royal Coffee's blog