Royal Gem Ecuador Farmgate Zamora Chinchipe Chito Community 50 Lb – 30036 – SPOT RCWHSE

Price $292.50 per box

Box Weight 50 lbs

Position Spot

Boxes 21

Warehouses Oakland

Flavor Profile Lime, caramel, chocolate, bright, sweet, clean

About this coffee

Grower

Select producers from the Chito community

Altitude

1600 - 1800 masl

Variety

Sarchimor, Caturra, SL-28, Catimor, Castillo, Colombia 6

Soil

Sandy clay loam

Region

Chito municipality, Zamora Chinchipe province, Ecuador

Process

Fully washed and dried on raised beds

Harvest

May - August

Certification

Conventional

Coffee Background

From Juan Peña and his team at CafExporto, producers of some of Ecuador’s most famous microlots, comes a new project: a top-tier regional blend from Ecuador’s far south, produced entirely according to the same protocols as Hacienda La Papaya, Juan Peña’s award-winning farm. 

Juan Peña’s strategy has always been to keep researching and growing with technology. Hacienda La Papaya, his farm located in northern Loja province, has an agreement with Cuenca’s University and Juan personally considers Hacienda la Papaya not only a center of production, but also a center of investigation with disciplinary teams such as agronomics, baristas (who visit him often and compete with his coffee), and cacao farmers. “We experiment with chemistry and I’m pretty sure that we have the best quality control, with sensors on harvest, developing of fertilizer, and drying rooms” Juan Says. 

Royal buys a number of microlots from Hacienda La Papaya annually, and when we learned the same team was partnering with select growers in Ecuador’s far south to produce a regional blend as exacting in process as La Papaya, we were immediately intrigued. After 2 years of establishing protocols for fertilization, harvesting, processing, and farm renovation, Juan and his team are proud to present a coffee they feel showcases the best, cleanest version of a southern Ecuador blend. 

96% of the coffee is produced by just 7 growers in the Chito area: Rubén Cunia, José Jiménez, Pablo Guerrero, Melania García, Flavio Muñoz, Tuto Villaces, and Marco Abad. The remaining 4% comes from a few new farmers in the Morona-Santiago and Limón Indanza provinces, to Chito’s north. All participating farms practice rigorous cherry selection during harvest, depulp their coffees same day as picking, and ferment for 48 hours under water. Parchment is dried on raised beds in greenhouses with retractable sides to allow for select periods of airflow, which helps unwanted humidity escape and keeps temperatures stable. All dried parchment is stored in GrainPro bags on site for quality evaluation by the CafExporto team.  

Zamora Chinchipe, in which Chito is the southeastern corner, is one of Ecuador’s southernmost provinces. This part of the country is almost entirely high elevation and is covered in various microclimates of páramo (alpine tundra) humid forests, and jungle. This stretch of the Andes is a kind of ecological bridge between the vast inland Amazonian basin to the east, and the coastal desert of northern Peru. It’s a unique blend of humid and arid zones with an elevation and fertility that privileges specialty coffee production. Zamora Chinchipe in particular, because of its closeness to the Amazon, is associated by Ecuadorians with an unparalleled natural wealth, and coffee producing areas are interspersed with national parks and protected forests. Farmers were paid an average farmgate equivalent of $3.01/lb for green, exportable coffee. 

Before the development of Ecuador’s northern estates, the southern provinces of Loja and Zamora Chinchipe were synonymous with the country’s coffee industry. And their production resembles that of neighboring Colombia and Peru: remote, small family plots picking and processing coffee by hand, represented through local growers’ organizations, and generally speaking regionally homogenous profiles. Records held by the Ecuadorian Censo Nacional Económico, the country’s economic statistical office, show that coffee was first commercialized in the Loja region in 1820. So, coffee across Ecuador’s south is many generations old and is considered a meaningful heritage to thousands of landowners of indigenous descent. This small blend hopefully represents a long-term program of excellent quality not through rare cultivars or high-priced auctions, but through strong fundamentals and shared knowledge between accomplished estates and aspiring small farms.