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Anhumas TTOA

Brazil - South Minas - Anhumas TTOA - Natural

ObataIcatuMundo novoRed catuaiNatural

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About this coffee

Our Anhumas coffee comes from the production of 14 small family farms (8-10 hectares on average) along the Anhumas valley. Moreover the name Anhumas comes both from a bird endemic to Brazil from the river that crosses this valley. Cleiton Mapelli's Fazenda Anhumas was the pilot farm for this project. Located near the city of Mococa, he is the 4th generation of coffee growers. His grandparents, Italian immigrants, worked as pickers in the region. In 1954, they were able to buy their first farm. This story is a classic illustration of the farms in the region. This growing project includes new farms from the valley every year as long as they take part in their shared sustainable approach. 

Anhumas is a varietal blend mainly composed of catuai, obata, mundo novo and icatu. The coffees are dried on patios. 

SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURAL PRACTICES --> TRANSITION TO ORGANIC CERTIFICATION

In his farm, Cleiton manages intercrops and does not use herbicides. Moreover, all the producers taking part in this project are sensitive to sustainable agricultural methods and put in place water treatment practices to preserve their shared environment. 

A DIFFERENTIATING COFFEE LABEL
- Traceability on 14 family-sized farms, 8-10 hectares on average
- Sustainable agricultural practices
- TTOA : transition to organic agriculture

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  • Origin

    Brazil
  • Region

    Mogiana
  • Species

    Arabica
  • Varieties

    Obata,

    Icatu,

    Mundo novo,

    Red catuai

  • Process

    Natural

  • Drying

    Patios

  • Packaging

    60kg - Polypro bags

  • Altitude

    1100
  • Harvest period

    June - September
  • Type of harvest

    Manual

The region Mogiana

The state of Sao Paulo is home to one of Brazil's best-known coffee-growing regions: Mogiana. The Mogiana region is named after a railway company, Companhia Mogiana de Estradas de Ferro, which created the "coffee railway" in 1883. This improved transport and, above all, increased coffee production in the region. Mogiana has altitudes of between 800 and 1100 m, constant temperatures of around 20°C throughout the year and hilly terrain that is ideal for coffee production, for a well-balanced, sweet cup.

This region is mountainous and hilly. It is a transitional region from Atlantic Rainforest (wet areas) and Cerrado (dry plains) and this region gets a lot of sun. The high amount of sun provides high levels of photosynthesis for the plant’s solar panels (its leaves). In the cup you will taste lots of sweetness and a long finish however also big, creamy, fatty body, mouthfeel. This is because the polysaccharides created are in high amount and as the roast, they break down into shorter sugar chain structures which in the mouth provide the feeling of thicker texture. Fruit tones are present but unless fermentation is pushed, they will appear more like dried fruits.

Mogiana is a traditional coffee region with long tradition and families working in big coffee farms over several generations. As an early region being explored for coffee production, one can find many historical fazendas (some of which still produce coffee, while others changed to cattle or sugarcane today). Another combination easily found in the region is the typical Brazilian combination of coffee and milk production.

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