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Brazil Fazenda Salto Natural - IMPACT Cert
This speciality Brazilian coffee is sourced from Fazenda Salto located in the Minas Gerais region of Brazil. With an elevation of 1100 masl, this estate is made up of 800 hectares and grows Bourbon, Catuaí, Icatu, Mundo Novo and Red Catuaí varietals. This coffee is naturally processed and harvested between April and September. It is owned by Fabio Araujo Reis and has been awarded an impressive cupping score of 83. Enjoy tasting notes of dried fruit, roasted hazelnut, dark chocolate and caramel.

Brazil Fazenda Salto Natural - IMPACT Cert

£11.69Price
1 Kilogram
Out of Stock
  • Just under 40% of all coffee in the world is produced in Brazil - around 3.7 million metric tons annually. With so much coffee produced, it’s no wonder that the country produces a wide range of qualities. Brazil produces everything from natural Robusta, to the neutral and mild Santos screen 17/18, to the distinctive Rio Minas 17/18. In recent years, Brazilian producers have also begun investing more heavily in specialty coffee production. Through our in-country partners in Brazil, including our sister company, we are able to provide a wide range of Brazilian coffees to our clients: from macrolot to microlot.

    Today, the most prolific coffee growing regions of Brazil are Espirito Santo, São Paulo, Minas Gerais, and Bahia. Most Brazilian coffee is grown on large farms that are built and equipped for maximizing production output through mechanical harvesting and processing. The relatively flat landscape across many of Brazil’s coffee regions combined with high minimum wages has led most farms to opt for this type of mechanical harvesting over selective hand-picking.

    In the past, mechanization meant that strip-picking was the norm; however, today’s mechanical harvesters are increasingly sensitive, meaning that farms can harvest only fully ripe cherries at each pass, which is good news for specialty-oriented producers.

    In many cases and on less level sections of farms, a mixed form of ‘manual mechanized’ harvesting may be used, where ripe coffee is picked using a derriçadeira – a sort of mechanized rake that uses vibration to harvest ripe cherry. A tarp is spanned between coffee trees to capture the cherry as it falls.

    With the aid of these newer, more selective technologies, there’s a growing number of farms who are increasingly concerned with – and able to deliver - cup quality.

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