#28 Ethiopia
Ethiopia, Yirgacheffe
Natural, Wolisho & Dega
Candy. honey. peach. vanilla.
Magarissa’ refers to a green colour in the Oromiffa language. The coffee is known for its balanced sweet berries.
This natural lot was processed at the Gedeb Worka Chelbesa Station, managed by Atara Wako. The cherries for this lot are grown at altitudes of 1,950 to 2,000 metres in the Gedeb Worka Chelbesa highlands, located in the broader Gedeb Woreda. This lot comes from outgrower farms in Worka Chelbesa.
Atara Wako and his family process Natural Grade 1 and 2 coffee each year, with around 324 farmers delivering cherries to their dry station. Atara has been specialising in processing and drying naturals since 2021.
This coffee is supplied to us through Origin Land Coffee, which works with Atara Wako through a vertical integration agreement.
Variety | 100 % Arabica, Wolisho & Dega |
Processing | Natural processed |
Land/Region | Ethiopia, Yirgacheffe |
Farmer | Atara Wako |
Altitude | 1950-2000 masl |
Cupping Score | 86 |
Roast Master, Quality cupper & Barista | Søren Stiller Markussen. |
As a general rule you should dial in your espresso using a scale. The first three shots is normally indicating your espresso flow and the appearance of how well your espresso flow/brew.
Your first indicator should be the first drop appearing after activating starting the water flow (pump/bottom).
I recommend the first drop to appear approx. at 8-10 sec. In that way your espressoshot will brew as long a 26-31 sec. if it appears before 6 sec. I will recommend you should grind finer and vise versa if the first drop appears too late/after 11 sec or more.
This extraction will give you a more ristrettoét espresso and more intens.
Dose | 21 g dobb shot |
Extraction time | 27-29 sek |
Liguid mass | 38 g. |
Extraction rate | 21/38= 0,55% |
The dose is calculated using a 20g porta filter min. dose 19g/ max. dose 21 g. pr double espresso.
This coffee is ideal to brew on Siphon, Chemex, Hario, Stagg fellow and December dripper Brew/ratio mass depends on how you pour the water, the weight of your coffee and the length of your brew. I like to recommend that you try to use different pouring techniques. So you will find out what will suit you and the coffee you have in your hands.
Step 1
Prefinfusion = Using water to wet the coffee, so the particle can absorb water, giving access to flavour and aromas. As a rule when you use less coffee, less water is used to preinfusion. "just enough to cover the coffee in the filter".
Step 2
Blooming = this is where the coffee particles is expanding, as any cellular products, giving access to transform the coffee attributes in to flavours and aromas. As a genius = less coffee/shorter blooming time. More Coffee/longer blooming time = that make sense right? Ie. 33 g of coffee = 30 sec blooming time. 60 g of coffee = 50-60 sec blooming time.
Step 3
Building up your coffee in the filter = you coffee brewing times length and letting you coffee steep in the filter. Coffee needs to be handled firm and homogenises.
Ie. Dont let your coffee set/sit or "dry out in the filter" when you pour the water in your coffee filter. Vise versa, you have to be careful, that you don't pour too much water, so you create a "swimming pool" on top of the coffee in the filter. The coffee should have a smooth "run through" contact time with water. You can find inspiration on brew guides