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Taiwan Yangui Geisha

Taiwan Yangui Geisha

Regular price CHF 70.00
Regular price Sale price CHF 70.00
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Black Friday

14 in stock

This is our first coffee grown in Asia! And we're starting with something really special.

Coffee from the Alishan region is known for its complex flavors and beautiful acidity. This Honey Geisha is no exception: It is beautifully balanced with elegant notes of florals and tea and subtle citrus aromatics, we think of bergamot.

After harvest, this coffee was processed as a honey. After a short low-oxygen fermentation, it was depulped and then dried with the mucilage still attached.

We wrote about our trip to Taiwan in the Stories section.

Process: Honey/Pulped Natural
Varieties/Cultivars: Geisha
Altitude: 1200 masl, 23.5°N
Cup Profile: Oolong Tea, Jasmine, Bergamot

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Price Transparency

We paid an FOB price of $32.43/lb for this coffee, which is 1622% of the Fairtrade minimum price.
Learn more about what this means here.

Yangui Coffee Manor

Farm: Yangui Coffee Manor
Producer: Fa'ei Poitsonü (Han-Wen Pu)
Purchasing relationship: 1 years
Region: Dabang Village, Alishan Township, Chiayi County
Altitude: 1100-1500 masl, 23.5°N

Yangui is a farm characterized by its innovative practices and the owner’s infectious humor. With around 4000 coffee trees, it produces approximately 2 tons of coffee annually and grows varieties like SL34, Typica and Geisha. The cool climate, abundant rainfall, and fertile soil in Alishan create optimal conditions for growing these varieties.

We noticed producer Pu Han Wen’s (name in Tsou language: Fa’ei Poitsonü) emphasis on experimentation and resourcefulness on the fields as well as in the processing and fermentation techniques applied at Yangui. He has built and patented his own mechanical dryer to combat the region's unreliable hours of sunshine, frequent rains and high humidity. This dryer, combined with his custom-built storage room, where the coffee is left to rest after drying, ensures the coffee maintains its quality.

Soon after our visit on the farm in April 2024, the region ran the prestigious annual Alishan Coffee Evaluation and Assessment, awarding the best coffees grown in the region. Pu Han Wen's coffees reached the top 3 in four out of five categories, winning gold with this very coffee as well as one other! Taiwan Coffee Lab says: «It's a truly remarkable achievement to win among 167 submissions in the country's most competitive producing region. We are very happy for him.» Later this year, Taiwan will also hold its first official Cup of Excellence competition, having run a pilot before.

Taiwan Coffee Laboratory

We have bought this coffee with support from Taiwan Coffee Laboratory (TCL), which is a key player in Taiwan’s specialty coffee development. The lab is committed to promoting specialty coffee grown in Taiwan, both nationally and internationally. They accomplish this through technical services, teaching and hosting coffee education programs, organizing several coffee evaluation programs every year and awarding the best Taiwanese coffees. Along with the the Alliance for Coffee Excellence, TCL has organized the first official Cup of Excellence competition in Taiwan.

Taiwan

It is much more common to drink high-quality coffee in Taiwan than to produce it. While the Taiwanese specialty coffee scene is thriving, it is certainly not a country that comes to mind when you think about coffee production. The small island is probably best-known as a producer of tea, especially oolong, as the world's leader in the semiconductor industry, or for the ongoing conflict with China. Yet, coffee production plays an ever-growing role in a a few areas of Taiwan.

Alishan is one of Taiwan's coffee growing regions, renowned for its stunning mountainous landscapes and high-altitude tea plantations. In recent years, however, it has also gained recognition for its specialty coffee farms. We like to think of it as the Yirgacheffe of Taiwan.

Compared to most coffee producing countries, wages as well as the standard of living are much higher in Taiwan. This fact, along with a very limited availability of land suitable for coffee growing, as well as a growing demand for the special island coffee inevitably makes the coffee very expensive. Given that they can't even come close to competing with prices in most other countries that grow coffee, it makes sense that many producers have shifted towards more exclusive coffees, working with cultivars such as Geisha, Pacamara or Mara-Geisha.

Brew Recommendation

Origami Dripper S, Sibarist Fast Cone S filter
15g coffee, 250g water, 93°c
medium-coarse filter grind size
brew with 5 pours
total contact time 2:35-2:50