Ethiopia Sidamo UG TOP Natural

37272 – Ecotact Bags – SPOT SHANGHAI

Bag 1

Warehouses Shanghai

Check out our Guide to Ethiopian Coffee Grades

Grower

Various smallholder farmers

Altitude

1550-2200 masl

Variety

Indigenous landraces and regional heirloom cultivars

Soil

Vertisol

Region

Sidama Zone, Southern Nations, Nationalities, and Peoples’ Region, Ethiopia

Process

Fully natural sundried on raised beds

Harvest

October – February

Certification

Conventional

Natural processed coffees in Sidama (also spelled “Sidamo” by some) typically begin with freshly picked coffee cherry that is hand sorted for uniformity, washed clean and floated for consistent density.  After intake and sorting, cherry is typically moved directly to dry on raised screen beds, where it will stay for 2-3 weeks on average.  

At almost every processing site, drying cherry is kept to a very shallow depth on the tables, often only a single cherry deep, and is rotated nearly continuously by a huge staff of seasonal employees who rake, stir, pile, and toss the drying coffee to ensure an even dehydration in the open air. Drying coffee is covered during the searingly-hot afternoon hours to protect it from cracking, and again overnight to block the settling humidity. The result of almost all naturals from Sidama is a round and full tactile with perfume-like dried fruit flavors and an earthy or herbaceous complexity. 

Coffee cultivation in the Sidama Zone is rooted in traditional and sustainable agricultural practices. Coffee here, as throughout Ethiopia, is mainly some combination of indigenous landrace arabica strains and regional heirloom cultivars selected by farmers over generations for the coffee’s ability to thrive in particular local climates. Sidama has a robust and diverse coffee farming landscape; it has one of the most robust cooperative unions in the country with 53 member cooperatives, as well as a thriving industry of independent washing stations. While often considered Ethiopia’s second-best terroir after Gedeo Zone (also known as “Yirgacheffe”), qualities in Sidama often meet or surpass those of Gedeo’s most famous districts. Coffees here can be planted at some of the world’s highest elevations, with some of the best soil and processing conditions found anywhere in Ethiopia.