• High altitude, single farm, bright, sweet, fruity espresso.

Peruvian Finca Aladinos Espresso Roast

From: £8.25

Quantity:

Peruvian Finca Aladinos Espresso Roast

Peruvian Finca Aladinos

Finca Aladinos has always been popular with our customers. For us, it was our first stand-out “wow!” Peruvian coffee of the decade. A small producer that has coffee processing down to a fine art (in my heavily biased opinion).  We import this coffee alongside our Organic Peruvian coffees, sharing a container with some old friends. Sharing containers is great for the environment and also helps one another a little too. The espresso profile is here! If you prefer the lighter, more filter-orientated roast, you could look: here.

TOP TRUMPS

Country: Peru

Farm name: Aladino

Owners; Aladino Delgado Perez and Rosa Burga Vasquez

Department: Cajamarca

Province: Jaen

District: Chontali

Farm size: 14 Hectares

Altitude farm: 1870-2100 meters above sea level.

Varietals: Caturra and Tabi

Process: Fully washed  Drying: Dried in a solar dryer.

Temperature: Approx. 20-25° Celsius during the day and 10-12° Celsius at night

Soils: Loamy clay with an arable layer of 30 to 40 cm deep, presence of gravel, pH neutral, and presence of an abundance of organic matter.

Main Harvest period: Mid-July to Mid-October.

Roast: Espresso Roast

 

Espresso:

Biggest drink downwards

9oz Milk-based drink: This is SO  malty and SWEET! Think Crunchie meets Daim bar.

6oz Milk-based drink. Lychee, shortbread, grapefruit

Espresso. Grapefruit, Lime, deep, herbal and balanced.

Recipe/Guide:

Milk-based drinks:

17g of coffee into 34g of espresso liquid in 25-30 seconds.

94C is a good place to start with this.

Espresso: same input of 17g of coffee, run longer into 45-50g of espresso liquid in 26-33 seconds.

Please note, as always, that this is a guide. If the coffee comes out a little shorter or longer, try it; you may find something new or something that you prefer!

 

Back story

Aladino (as in Finca Aladinos)  and Rosa. The name of this micro-lot could also be that of a fairytale, and the location of their farm is magical. Only a couple of years ago, Aladino and his father, Urbano Delgado, started to plant the coffee varieties on their farm when they heard that the best specialty coffee producers in the region were growing Caturra and Tabi. In 2002, CENICAFE in Colombia introduced the Tabi cultivar: it is a hybrid of Bourbon, Typica, and Timor. One of the most important attributes is its resistance to coffee leaf rust, but it also displays the good cup quality characteristics of its Bourbon and Typica parents. The fun fact is that ‘Tabi’ means ‘good’ in the Guambiano language, which is spoken by the Guambiano indigenous people.

The farm is simply called ‘Finca Aladinos’ because friends and family who would visit him would say ‘Vamos a la Finca de Aladinos’, ‘Let’s go to Aladino’s farm.’ “And we just keep using that name”, he explains. Aladino then says that he is the second-generation coffee farmer on the land. Previously, a certain part of the farm belonged to his late father. But his father was also the person who gave him a base of knowledge of coffee cultivation. Thanks to that knowledge and his growing passion, he got opportunities that he could never have dreamed of, such as visiting other countries, such as the United States and Japan. But Aladino has not stopped learning, he aims to improve his process every day.

 

Let us know how you are getting on with Aladino’s coffee @JGInstagram 

 

SKU: 0417E2 Categories: ,