
DESCENT WITHOUT NADIR, Ecuador
Barley Sugar, White Raspberry, Orange Blossom
Suitable for all brewing methods.
Roasters Notes: Barley Sugar, White Raspberry, Orange Blossom
| Producer: | Henry & Verona Gaibor |
| Farm: | Finca Hakuna Matata & Maputo |
| Region: | La Perla, Nanegal, Pichincha |
| Varietal: | Typica |
| Process: | Lactic Washed |
| Altitude: | 1,350 MASL |
Henry and Verona Gaibor met in Bujumbura in 1996. He was a war-trauma surgeon from Ecuador. She was a war nurse from Switzerland. Both were deployed with Doctors Without Borders in the middle of a humanitarian crisis.
In 1998 they returned to Ecuador and ran a clinic in Quito for thirteen years. What followed was not a shift in discipline but a redirection of it. Coffee became the work. The same precision they had carried through field medicine now moved into picking, fermenting, and drying.
Finca Hakuna Matata and Maputo sit in La Perla, Nanegal, in the province of Pichincha. At 1,350 metres the farms are low by Ecuadorian standards, but the microclimate carries its own weight. Mist settles across the coffee fields in the afternoons. Nights turn cold. The plants are held between warmth and stress, and the cherries develop sugars that higher-altitude sites rarely match.
The Gaibors operate their own micromill and control every stage from wet-milling through drying. Varieties are separated and marked across the land - Typica, Bourbon, SL-28, Sidra, Kaffa, Caturra - each held to its own terms. This lot is Typica, one of the oldest lineages in Arabica coffee, carried from southwestern Ethiopia through Yemen to Java and onward. Low yielding. Disease prone. Kept alive by those who choose it.
Cherries are pulped, fermented under controlled lactic conditions, and washed clean. Drying is carried out on raised African beds. The result is structured and bright, with layered acidity and defined fruit.
Ecuador exports roughly one hundred containers of coffee in a year. What leaves these farms is held close.
Choose options
