Clusters of ripe yellow coffee cherries growing on a coffee plant, surrounded by glossy green leaves and partially shaded by sunlight.

E-003

Hambella

Ethiopia

Style:

Natural

Varietal:

Heirloom

65% of Ethiopia’s coffee growing area is located within the Oromia region, with around 150,000 tons a year produced across 88 regions within 13 regions.

Coffee label design featuring bold blocks of color and typography. The label includes a large purple and cream letter 'E' on a red background, and details such as 'HEIRLOOM NATUREL,' '1700 M,' and tasting notes: 'PAMPLEMOUSSE, ABRICOT SEC, QUETSCHE.' It specifies the origin as 'ÉTHIOPIE – Hambella' with a globe icon. There's an intensity scale shaded in purple tones, with a triangle indicating a medium-high level. A QR code and batch number 'E-003' are also present.
Coffee label design featuring bold blocks of color and typography. The label includes a large purple and cream letter 'E' on a red background, and details such as 'HEIRLOOM NATUREL,' '1700 M,' and tasting notes: 'PAMPLEMOUSSE, ABRICOT SEC, QUETSCHE.' It specifies the origin as 'ÉTHIOPIE – Hambella' with a globe icon. There's an intensity scale shaded in purple tones, with a triangle indicating a medium-high level. A QR code and batch number 'E-003' are also present.

Cupping notes

This jammy natural is a regular favourite with the citrus of the washed being concentrated more towards mango, dried strawberry, and apple. Coconut, milk choc and florals add to the expected complexity.

Description

65% of Ethiopia’s coffee growing area is located within the Oromia region, with around 150,000 tons a year produced across 88 regions within 13 regions. The majority of the region’s coffee is known as garden coffee due to the small plots of land with lower yields, as producers multicrop with other cash crops to maximise their returns. However, Hambella farm encompasses 200 hectares and employs 28 full-time staff, swelling to just over 700 in full season. 70% of these workers are women, and there is a program for farmers in the local area to be able to work closely with agronomists and processing experts to increase the quality of their coffee. Some of this is then bought and sold by the farm in addition to their own beans.The coffee from Hambella is grown in the Guji zone, but the processing facilities are across the district border in Gedeb, Gedeo zone. The coffee is left to dry in the sun for 21 days on raised beds, being turned frequently before being bagged.The farm itself was created by Aman Adinew and his brother Michael. Previous to this, Aman was director of quality control at the ECX, or Ethiopia Commodity Exchange, and was in charge of the first speciality coffee lab in Ethiopia.