LIMITED - Roastmaster's Select Microlot Drop - Sumatra Jasmine
LIMITED - Roastmaster's Select Microlot Drop - Sumatra Jasmine
This is a limited offer - estate-grown coffee from Aceh Province (pronounced AH-CHEY), Sumatra’s most famous and prolific for specialty wet-hulled profiles. Unlike almost all other wet-hulled coffee, however, this rare microlot uses a unique processing style that includes multiple fermentation additives like yeast and powdered jasmine flower to achieve a totally distinct, nuanced coffee with marmalade sweetness and sweet, fresh, jasmine aromatics.
Nearly sold out! Once it is gone, it will only be a memory... make sure it is YOUR memory.
Learn MoreDESCRIPTION
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Tasting Notes:A smooth coffee with marmalade sweetness and jasmine aromatics
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ProcessSemi-washed; co-fermented with jasmine powder and yeast
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REGIONBener Meriah Regency, Aceh Province, Sumatra, Indonesia
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VARIETALTypica
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ALTITUDE1300 - 1400 masl
Coffee is grown all over Aceh and is particularly concentrated in Bener Meriah regency. The vast majority of it is smallholder grown and gradually consolidated through local processors and millers, blending their immediate communities or trading batches of coffee between one another until an exporter buys them up. Central Sumatera Coffee (CSC) is an exception to this. They operate a 100-hectare estate right in Bener Meriah regency, where they can control the genetics, harvesting, and post-harvest techniques to perfection. Coffees like this one, luxuriously creamy, floral, and uniquely perfumed with (you guessed it) the fragrance and flavors of fresh jasmine flowers, are only possible in the hands of exacting processors like CSC.
Sumatra's Aceh Province
Aceh (pronounced AH-CHEY) is the northernmost province of Sumatra. Its highland territory, surrounding Lake Tawar and the central city of Takengon, is considered to be the epicenter of one of the world’s most unique coffee terroirs.
Coffee farms in this area are managed with the experience of many generations of cultivation, while also harmoniously woven into their surrounding tropical forests. The canopies are loud and fields are almost impenetrably thick with coffee plants, fruit trees, and vegetables, all of which are constantly flushing with new growth. Year-round mists and rain showers never cease, farm floors are spongy and deep with layered biomass, and almost every square meter of the region seems to exude life. Nothing is ever still. Including coffee ripening, which occurs ten months out of the year.
Central Sumatera Coffee
Central Sumatera Coffee (CSC) is a young group, with young leadership. It was originally founded in 2015 by Enzo Sauqi Hutabarat, an urban university student. Aware of the growing demand across greater Indonesia for Sumatra’s best coffees, he gravitated toward Aceh as a culture and potential business environment. Until 2020 CSC only sold coffee domestically, but starting in 2021 they began to export as well, selling bits of coffee to the Middle East, Europe, Asia, and finally, in 2024, the United States, via Royal Coffee, for the first time.
CSC buys coffee from smallholders like a typical processor does. However, CSC also operates 3 large estates of about 100 hectares each: one in Bener Meriah, where this lot was produced; as well as 2 others in North Sumatra province, near Lake Toba, and one in Bali. Their farms are organized varietally, allowing them to maintain unique genetic separations during harvest and processing.
Typical smallholder coffee in Aceh tends to be a blend of cultivars, most of which are catimor hybrids, and this gives much of the area’s coffee a set of common characteristics that can be hard to transcend for a single producer. In CSC’s case, they have the genetic isolation, and the volume from such a large estate, to help them produce something unique. Even with similar processing styles as the collectors and coops around them. This estate in particular is planted with newly planted Abyssinia seedlings (most likely the AB7 or “Rambung” variety), and what’s called Gayo 2 or “Borbor”, a poorly-defined cross between Timor hybrid and Bourbon. These trees are less than 6 years old and are very productive.
“Jasmine Process”
CSC manages processing on their own estates. The Bener Meriah estate employs 30 pickers during harvest months, and 6 specialists for processing. Most of their estate coffee is wet-hulled in the traditional fashion, but this microlot received two significant additional steps, blending multiple unique fermentation techniques to augment the final cup, and ultimately processed as a semi-washed.
After picking, the cherry was first held in nylon bags for 16 hours, to allow the fruit to soften and internal sugar content to peak. After this brief cherry “maceration”, the coffee was depulped and moved to fermentation tanks. Into the tanks, CSC added yeast as an inoculating agent and powdered dried jasmine flower to co-ferment with the sticky parchment.
Once the blended fermentation cycle was complete, the coffee was patio-dried until the internal moisture reached 35%, after which the coffee was wet-hulled and the raw beans were further dried until reaching a final 11-12% moisture content. After this the coffee was mechanically milled, hand sorted, and bagged for export.
Ultimately, this coffee was then selected by Roastmaster Jacob Long for Thanksgiving Coffee Company where it was profiled and artisan roasted for this limited release.
Customer Review
Coffee to Water Ratio
Using the correct amount of coffee will ensure that your coffee is brewed to strength, without over-extracting or under-extracting the coffee to compensate for an inappropriate dose. We recommend 2 grams of coffee for every fluid ounce of water used to brew. Weighing coffee is the most accurate way to measure the appropriate dose. If a scale is not available, we recommend 2 heaping tablespoons of ground coffee for every 5 ounces of water used to brew.
Grind Size
Producing the correct particle size in ground coffee is one of the most important steps in coffee brewing. In general, a finer grind will produce a more intense brew and a coarser grind will produce a less intense brew. At the same time, a grind that is too fine will produce an over-extracted, astringent brew, and a grind that is too coarse will produce a weak, under-extracted brew lacking flavor. In pour-over methods, grind size also affects the rate of extraction, as water will pass more slowly through a finer grind, and more quickly through a coarser grind. We strongly recommend burr grinders over blade grinders.
Water Temperature and Quality
Water temperature dramatically affects the extraction of coffee’s flavor during brewing. We recommend brewing with water at 200-202° Fahrenheit for best results. Using fresh, clean, chlorine-free water is essential.
Coffee 101
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