FEATURE ESPRESSO | Emma Rioja | Peru

EmmaRioja_Esp_AW101x76_240226.jpg
EmmaRioja_Esp_AW101x76_240226.jpg

FEATURE ESPRESSO | Emma Rioja | Peru

from £11.00

For best results we would always recommend purchasing whole bean and grinding fresh before brewing. If you don't have a grinder, we can grind according to your preferred brewing method just before shipping.

Great for espresso machines, mocha pots (stove-tops), Aeropress & cafetière. Delicious on its own and with milk.

SHIPPING & DISPATCH:
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Same day dispatch cut off is 12pm.

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Key origin info:

Producer: Emma Rioja Tarillo at her farm La Guaba in Perlamayo
Processed at: the family’s own wet mill and drying facilities

Region: Huabal District, San Ignacio Province, Cajamarca
Altitude: 1900 masl

Variety: Caturra
Process: Washed; rested in cherry for 24 hrs, de-pulped, fermented, washed and dried on raised beds

Exporter: Falcon Coffees | Importer: Falcon Speciality

Cup profile: Syrupy & sweet, dates & raspberry jam


About the Rioja family & their coffee:

Rioja family cultivate coffee together at their 2 hectare farm in Perlamayo, Huabal District. Emma, Elver, Isaac and Severiano are all members of this coffee producing family. This lot comes from the family’s plot called La Guaba which is currently run by Emma Rioja Tarillo.

The Riojas use traditional cultivation methods without chemical fertilisers. Manual and mechanical weeding is carried out around the farm and coffee trees are pruned to rejuvenate them and ensure good yields.

Emma takes exceptional care during processing, resting the ripe harvested cherries in sacks before de-pulping and carefully processing with the traditional washed method. The cherries are left to rest in sacks under shade for 24 hours before de-pulping. After this, the mucilage covered beans are left to ferment in a tank for around 12 hours before being washed three times. Next they are dried outdoors on a tarp for a day before being moved to patios to finish drying over approximately 15 days. Emma turns the beans 6 times a day during patio drying.

Growing coffee in Peru at this altitude comes with many challenges exacerbated by climate change, with droughts being more frequent. The family works hard to mitigate the risks in various ways, notably by planting shade trees amongst the coffee plants and installing an irrigation system.

We’ve purchased coffee from Isaac Rioja several years ago and absolutely loved it. Sadly we weren’t been able to get hold of it again for the past few seasons, mainly because of logistical issue in Peru. We have hoped that it would come around again and so we are all the more excited to welcome coffee from this family again this year for the second consecutive season! This year we purchase for two different lots from the Rioja family and are delighted to release this one as one of our feature espressos with it’s syrupy body and super sweet and vibrant flavour profile reminding us of dates and raspberry jam.


About Falcon Peru:

Background on Peru and Por El Cambio project:

POR EL CAMBIO means FOR CHANGE. The project has been established in Cajamarca, Northern Peru by our importing partner Falcon Coffees in 2019.

As Falcon explain:

In Peru, like some other origins, coffee farmers are sensitive to market changes and often lack basic training and the incentive to produce higher qualities of coffee, as premiums often don’t materialise. For these reasons we decided we needed to change the way we buy coffee in Peru and work directly with producers, allowing us to control and improve upon existing quality and have full financial traceability. Ensuring these two factors would help us to pay higher prices for the coffees and to make sure that producers received a fair price for the coffee they delivered us, above the market price. In order to do this, we set up a warehouse in Jaen and started to buy in parchment directly from producers.

The vision was to work directly with small producers who aren't associated with or able to sell their coffee through local cooperatives. They represent 75% of producers in Northern Peru and are usually based in remote areas with little or no access to training and price premiums adequate to the quality of coffee they are able to produce. This can leave their income often dependant on local aggregators who buy their coffee at farm for cash before selling it on which results in the producers being paid very little and the potential and quality of their coffee being lost.

Falcon's team on the ground in Peru, have established relationships and now work with around 300 small producers who bring their coffee in parchment directly to their warehouse where individual lots are graded, yield calculated and assessed for quality. Producers are then paid on the same day according to a transparent system (based on cup score and yield) and receive premiums well above the local market price. Aside from gaining access to a fair market, producers are also able to receive training on farm management, good harvest and processing practices.