Luz Dary Polo, Washed Caturra, Colombia
Origin: Huila, Colombia
Producer: Luz Dary Polo
Process: Washed
Varieties: Washed Caturra
Altitude: 1640masl
Importer: Shared Source
Roast: Light
Notes: Tangerine, Floral, Field Berry
Looks like Luz is back on the menu! We're beyond excited to be offering Luz's caturra again, which was the first coffee we ever roasted and launched two years ago! We've been able to offer Luz's coffee four times now, and look forward to being able to continue working with her in the future!
We're loving this coffee, it's so sweet, with a nice soft tangerine acidity, big floral notes, and a round berry-like sweetness. This coffee is so incredibly expressive, and we think a big part of that is the detail in processing that Luz Dary puts into her coffee.
Process:
Luz Dary starts with ripe cherries, and floats them in water to remove the under- and over-ripe cherries. From there, she carefully stores the cherries in a sealed Grain Pro bags, and they begin their fermentation process within the cherry.
After 40 hours of this initial “cherry-ferment”, she de-pulps the coffee, and leaves it to ferment in a sealed pickle barrel for a low-oxygen environment fermentation - up to 60 additional hours of fermentation after the initial cherry ferment.
From there, she washes just once and takes the coffee to dry. During peak harvest seasons, she pays a significantly higher price to pickers, which allows her to ask that they only pick ripe cherries.
About Luz Dary & Los Guácharos
45-year old Luz Dary works on her 3 hectare farm in the township of Villa Fátima, outside of Bruselas, Huila. There she has 4,000 caturra trees and 1,000 pink bourbon trees, on her 3 hectare farm, and she recently renovated 7,000 variedad Colombia trees, replacing the older trees with the “bourbon ají” varietal. (Maybe we have some aji.. maybe you'll see some soon.
Luz Dary is a member of the “ Los Guácharos association “ - a small group of independent coffee farmers that share technical know-how, and collectively commercialize their coffee to sell at higher volumes.
They are a quality focus’d group of producers in Southern Huila, where they’re currently working towards converting to fully organice agriculture, making their own fertilizers, fungicides, and building elaborate water filter systems to minimize water waste during proceesing.
Luz makes her own fertilizer she calls Super Magro, made of organic minerals, waste products, molasses, bone ash, and manure fermented with microorganisms collected from virgin soils, and it’s used as a fertilizer and a protectant from diseases. Very much like some very fancy Natural Wine producers following old ways.