Every coffee that is picked and processed needs a home, which is why coffee production takes different roads within our company.
Raised drying beds at Bukeye Washing Station in Burundi
The first road, modeled in Burundi, includes washing station ownership. In Burundi, we work with 5,500 smallholding farmers- who each grow less than a bag of coffee per annum- to produce and bring to market the coffee they grow. To accomplish this, we own three washing stations and work with farmers on eleven unique hills. Another crucial part of this model is farming. We own coffee farms that stand alongside our smallholding farmers. These farms act as model farms for the surrounding communities as well as give us a chance to experiment with and control some of the variables in growing coffee.
Haron Wachira and Ben Carlson hand-sorting coffee at Thunguri Washing Station in Kenya
The second road coffee production takes within our company is partnership. In Kenya for example, we are partnering with Haron Wachira to rehabilitate and refurbish the Wachira family’s dormant coffee factory and farm located on Mount Kenya, in Kirinyaga County. In our first season, we worked directly with thirty coffee farming families who live in the community. While the Wachira Group is not solely focused on coffee, we share the same vision of working with small-scale coffee farmers to improve their production, access to markets, and the price paid for their coffee.
Raised drying beds at Heza Washing Station in Burundi
We can’t control how much coffee is produced in a season, which is why the third road that coffee production takes at Long Miles issourcing from partnering coffee producers. Our intention is always to produce our own coffee, but some years we will also share coffees from local partnering coffee producers that have stood out to us on the cupping table. Partnering with these coffees enables us to continue year-round projects and programs that have become essential to who we are, whether that is our team of Long Miles Coffee Scouts, our Trees For Kibira reforestation project, or running Farmer Field Schools– to name a few.
No matter which of these roads we take, our end goal is the same: producing excellent coffees, uplifting the smallholding farmers who grow them, and meeting you, our roasting partners, where you’re at.You might already know this or be familiar with these names, but these are the coffees that our company produces:
Long Miles Micro-lots
To us, micro-lots are coffees that have been carefully curated based on two primary factors: traceable down to a distinct geographical locale where the coffee was grown, and a cup score of 86+ designated by our team. Each delivery of coffee cherry that we receive from our partner farmers at one of our washing stations is sorted and processed differently, depending on the country of origin.
Kibira Micro-lots
Kibira micro-lots are coffees that have been processed by coffee producers surrounding our Long Miles Washing Stations. Our cupping lab and quality control team cups through many dozens of lots in order to find the best coffees to partner with. We source these 86+ scoring coffees knowing that at every step of the way they have been processed according to the Long Miles Coffee standard. Partnering with these coffees enables us to continue programs that have become essential to who we are, namely the Long Miles Coffee Scouts and Trees For Kibira.
Kibira
Kibira lots represent coffees that have been sourced from partnering coffee producers. These coffees, ranging in quality and price, are tailored to your needs based on pre-harvest conversations and are typically contracted in larger quantities.
Hills
Our priority is to produce coffee that is of micro-lot quality, yet some of the coffees that we process fall slightly below the 86 mark designated by our team. Coffees that score between 84-85 points, are blended together and are traceable by washing station and called “Hills.”
If you have any questions about our coffee, please get in touch!
Fermentation is an incredibly complex process. The purpose of this blog post is not to present an exhaustive scientific perspective on coffee fermentation. We are coffee producers. We are not researchers, nor do we have a background in microbiology. The purpose of this blog post is to address some basic aspects of fermentation, as they pertain to coffee processing. If you are looking for an exhaustive scientific approach, there are people doing great work and research surrounding fermentation and coffee processing. One individual, in particular, that we would recommend checking out is Lucia Solis.
As an industry, we use the term “processing” to refer to the method by which coffee seeds are removed from the fruit in which they developed, in order to prepare them for export. Coffee seeds are, of course, what are colloquially referred to as coffee “beans”. However, they are not beans in any true botanical sense. That is to say, it’s the seeds which we roast, grind, and brew into the decoction known as coffee. In order to separate the seeds from the fruit, and do so in such a way that the seeds are stable and will not encourage microbial growth (bacteria, mold, etc), the seeds must be dried to a certain degree. As such, these are the two primary functions of processing: to dry the coffee to a stable level and to remove the seeds from the fruit.
Washed Processed coffees on drying tables at the Long Miles Coffee Washing Station
There are two broad processing categories under which these goals can be attained (and there are many sub-categories under these broad classifications which we’ll write about another time.) Natural, or Dry Processed, coffees are ones in which the seeds are allowed to dry inside the coffee fruit itself. Not long ago we talked about Naturally Processed coffees on Instagram – you can find that here.
Natural Processing is the original coffee processing method and is well suited to regions with a very dry harvest period. Before export, the dried fruit is broken open (mechanically) and the loosened seeds are sorted out from this. While ostensibly quite simple, producing Naturally Processed coffees in a way that is free from taste defects can be very challenging. This is especially true for producing countries or regions which have a very humid or rainy harvest period. In our experience, Burundi is particularly challenging in this regard. This is because the potential to produce top-quality Naturals is quite high. That said, some harvest seasons can be unpredictably wet, a problem increasingly exacerbated by a shifting climate.
Pulped coffee undergoing the Washed Process
These challenges surrounding drying the coffee without taste defects led to the development of the Wet or Washed Processing method long ago. In the Wet Processed method, the outer skin of the coffee fruit, along with some mucilage, is removed. At this stage, the coffee is fermented in order to remove the remaining mucilage, along with the stubborn pectic layer that surrounds the seeds. As such, when we talk about coffee fermentation, we are referring to a step in the Washed Processing method. After fermentation, these layers are easily washed off, allowing the coffee seeds to be dried. Since the vast majority of the available glucose and fructose is removed through this process, it is much easier to dry the coffee without encountering unwanted microbial activity that may lower the quality of the final product.
Up until fairly recently, this was viewed as the entire scope and purpose of fermentation: to clean the coffee, removing the seeds from the mucilage and pectin inside the coffee fruit. The process was not considered (by most) to impart any positive or even identifying flavors into the final product. In fact, many spoke of the goal of washed coffee in a similar way that some roasters speak of lightly roasting coffee: the process was one in which the goal was simply to add no negative flavors and to let the coffee “speak for itself,” as it were. In fact, the process of fermentation was considered so strictly functional and oblique as it pertains to coffee flavor, that machines were developed to mechanically remove the mucilage from the coffee, without the fermentation step. Carlos H. J. Brando writes in Wintgen’s seminal 2004 book, Coffee: Growing, Processing, Sustainable Production1, that, “although a lot of research work has gone into demonstrating that fermentation and mechanical removal of mucilage lead to the same quality results, some experts are still skeptical.” Elsewhere in Wintgen’s tome is the mechanical removal of mucilage as being able to produce the same quality coffee as traditionally fermented coffee, spoken of as fact.
While it is true that coffee seeds themselves do not actually undergo fermentation (only the mucilaginous material surrounding the seed), there has been a growing movement from researchers indicating that yes, fermentation does affect the flavor of the finished coffee. This has been noted anecdotally by some coffee professionals who have experienced a shift in coffee quality and complexity in production systems that previously employed traditional fermentation and have moved towards mechanical washing that does not require the coffee to be fermented. It has also been examined by individuals such as the aforementioned Lucia Solis.
Members of the Long Miles Coffee team stand alongside a soaking tank with fermenting coffee
Once coffee is pulped and exposed to microbes, these yeasts, bacteria, and fungi eat the glucose and fructose, along with some naturally occurring organic acids, found in the coffee fruit. During this process, fermentation by-products are created. These bi-products can penetrate the coffee seeds, affecting the final cup quality and qualities. Traditionally, the microbes present are naturally occurring and come from the environment – being found in the air, within the fermentation tanks, and also on the coffee fruit itself. In recent years, yeasts have been developed with a specific aim of modulating a coffee’s flavor profile. This is something we experimented with back in 2018 and may explore more in the future.
Even without the addition of selected yeasts, a number of factors can influence fermentation. Chief among these are temperature and the presence (or lack) of water. Warmer environments will speed up the fermentation process whereas cooler environments will draw out the process. It is for this reason that fermentation as a step in processing can never be based purely on a set amount of time. Our own experience fermenting coffee in Burundi these past eight years confirms this. To achieve a fermentation in which all the mucilaginous material has been fermented away can, for example, take eight hours in a warm climate, or thirty-six plus hours in a cooler climate for the exact same lot of coffee. It is true that over time one is able to have a target fermentation time based on the tank size, average temperature, etc. That is to say, with experience specific to any given washing station, one is eventually able to assume target fermentation times. But to enter into a new or unknown system and design a fermentation protocol based on time, rather than observing the process and progress of the fermentation as it is happening, would be putting the cart before the horse.
If the fermentation takes place underwater, the temperature of the fermenting mass is typically cooler than it would be without adding water. As such, this generally slows fermentation down. There is, however, another factor that is more important in influencing the final cup qualities. Coffee that is being fermented underwater is more conducive to bacterial proliferation. Coffee that is fermented dry is more conducive to yeast fermentation (though acetic acid bacteria is present in both circumstances). In our experience, fermentation which happens underwater also has the added benefit of being more homogenous. We can only assume this is because the fermentation bi-products which influence the cup quality are more evenly distributed via the water.
Naturally Processed coffee on drying tables
Though we have discussed fermentation as a step in the Wet or Washed Processing method, it is important to note that fermentation also technically happens in Naturally Processed coffees. Within the skin of the coffee fruit itself, mucilage ferments once the coffee has been removed from the shrub on which it grew. The fermentation process within a Naturally Processed coffee is very likely bacterial as bacteria is significantly smaller than yeasts and, thus, more likely to make its way inside the fruit. This highlights why it is so critical for the initial drying of Naturally Processed coffees to happen quickly. If the coffee is allowed to ferment for too long, the acetic acid bacteria will be able to negatively impact the final cup quality by producing strong acetic acid flavors (think apple cider vinegar). Some acetic acid is always present in coffee and this is a good thing as it can lend a fruited complexity to the final product. But, too much acetic acid leads to off, rotten, or “over fermented” flavors that are eschewed by most specialty coffee professionals and consumers alike.
References
1 Wintgen, J.N. 2012, Coffee: Growing, Processing, Sustainable Production: A Guidebook for Growers, Processors, Traders and Researchers, Second, Revised Edition, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim, Germany.
collected and translated by Joy Mavugo in conjunction with Robyn-Leigh van Laren from the Long Miles Story team
There was much rejoicing at the Long Miles Coffee Washing Stations recently as farmer payday took place. Payday is always one heavy with anticipation, excitement, and chaos of the happiest kind. It’s the one day of the year when all of the coffee farming families that we work with receive payment for the coffee cherries that they delivered during harvest season.
“ Payment day is a special day. It’s a day of building trust between a farmer and a buyer.”
– Honorate Dugunya, a coffee farmer from Ninga hill.
In the days leading up to it, our team works hard behind the scenes filling every person’s envelope with the season’s earnings and preparing for one big reunion with the coffee farming communities that we work with. This year, payday may have looked different from how it usually does but our team is unwaveringly grateful that it took place. We also celebrated a milestone; making our first set of payments at the newly built Ninga Washing Station site.
“To have a washing station on Ninga hill is like a country that fought for independence and got it. I will always celebrate this victory.No one will take it from us.”
– Paul Ntahondi, a coffee farmer from Ninga hill
There is an endless list of things that we are thankful for this harvest season. Paying every single coffee farmer that we work with is one of them.
From the Farm
written by Seth Nduwayo, Quality Control Manager for Long Miles Coffee
Frequently, I have referred to rain as a big challenge. We could lack it when it was expected and vice versa. For three months, from July to September, there was no rain as it was a dry season. Now we are at the end of September. October is knocking from the horizon. We have experienced some rain yet at Bujumbura and sometimes at Gitega, Budeca, where we took our coffee for dry milling. As coffee is not out on drying beds you may wonder why the blessing (rain) is evoked again as a challenge. In fact, the rain comes with cold weather, and humidity increases in warehouses. Thus, when the relative humidity is higher than that of coffee in storage, the latter start regaining moisture. As you can hear this, the end of one battle opens a door to the next. So, today we fight for having all the remaining lots milled, hand-picked, and sealed in Grain-pro as soon as possible. When all coffee is in Grain-pro, then we don’t have to worry about rainfall the same as before. This is the battle we will be fighting over the next couple of weeks.
From the Lab
written by David Stallings, Roaster Relations for Long Miles Coffee
This week we began our final dry-milling program for the Burundi season. Milling, which involves removing the parchment layer, or, in the case of naturally processed coffee, removing the fruit that has dried around the coffee seed, is, by itself, a speedy process. After the seeds are stripped of their botanical accouterment, they pass through various grading apparatuses. These include devices that separate the seeds by size, density, and color. Many metric tons of coffee can pass through the mill in a single day. The process that follows, however, is low tech and time-consuming. That process is, of course, the handpicking of the coffee. Absolutely critical to the production of top quality specialty coffee, our lots get handpicked upwards to five times! In a few short days, all of our Burundi lots for the year will have been milled. The next two to three weeks will be filled with handpicking the coffee.
It is a race to the finish from here. As Seth mentioned in his section above, we want to get the lots handpicked as soon as possible because that allows us to get them into Grain-pro and thus hermetically sealed and safe from the impending rainy season. Too frequently, as a green coffee buyer, I have seen the onset of a rainy season in any given country of production, as a strike against the quality of the green coffee. This is especially true for coffees that are on the margins of not being fully dried. Coffees for which taking on a small amount of moisture pushes them into territory that encourages the quick degradation of what we perceive as freshness. I am so pleased to know firstly, that all of our lots were dried exceptionally well this year and, secondly, that our timeline concerning getting these final lots into Grain-pro is looking very good.
Once this process is complete we will continue loading containers and sending them around the world. A record year for us, we have already loaded and dispatched two containers from this harvest. In a few short weeks that number will be seven. The past two years have been important ones in strengthening relationships with importing partners in various markets. While we work directly with as many of our roasting partners as possible, we have found it essential to have key relationships in various markets around the world. Not only are these partners service providers, moving the coffees from Burundi to their destination market, but they are also critical in helping facilitate relationships with smaller roasting partners. This year, our coffees can be found with the following importers:
If you are in one of these markets and interested in coffee this year, please reach out to me. I will be only too happy to work on a plan with you to either send you samples directly or connect you with one of the above-mentioned importers. Whether we are sending you samples and handling contracts directly or having an importing partner help facilitate the process, it is so important to us that we connect with you personally and work together on and through the process!
*If you are in the Australian market and interested in coffees from this season, please reach out to our Burundi Lab Manager, Jordan, who was not able to make it to Burundi this year due to the pandemic, and is native to and currently located in Australia!