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Colombia

You can get fresh coffee from Colombia all year round: from clean, consistent Washed lots to some of the wildest coffee experiments in the market.

Strong institutions set production and quality standards in Colombia long before the specialty movement was born. Their Washed coffees are clean and consistent with a good shelf-life. But younger Colombian farmers are reinventing coffee processing and pushing fermentation boundaries. The producers on Algrano represent both worlds and multiple regions so you can find the right coffee and partner.

Verified Sellers from

Colombia

Discover the right supplier for your roastery, from innovative farmers and independent exporters to certified cooperatives. Volume lots, micro-lots, blends or single varieties... You'll find what you're looking for.

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Finca El Sauce

Single Farm
Organic, Rainforest Alliance

When my husband Alvaro was little he lived in Tolima. Life was tough, but the coffee farms were always good places to live in and work. They had water, sanitary sewers and light. Farmers had status. This had such an impact on Alvaro on his childhood that he decided that one day he would be a coffee farmer too. Granja El Sauce is a dream come true for him and also for me. Alvaro grew up to be an agronomist and I worked as a systems engineer. We lived in San Gil for most of our adult life but wanted to move to the countryside to be close to nature. We run El Sauce as a fully organic farm and have been certified for years, even at times when the premiums were not that good. We believe it is important to take good care of our surroundings and adopt an ecological and sustainable approach. Recently we have been changing our post-harvest processing protocols to improve the cup quality of our coffees. We try to help our neighbours, all coffee farmers, towards a more ethical style of farming.

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San Fernando Coffee & Farm S.A.S. BIC (Xeridas Coffees)

Single Farm

XERIDAS, from the indigenous word "similar to the sky", was the way the Guanes referred to the current "Plateau of the Saints", a peaceful place that contrasts with their warrior nature, the same one they preserved until their disappearance. Located north of the Chicamocha Canyon, it was the place where the fruits of the earth were offered to the Gods; it is right there where our coffee history begins, born in the San Fernando Farm in 2006, as a model of specialty and sustainable coffee farming, a model that is now expanding and transforming coffee farming in the department of Santander (Colombia). With more than 10 years of experience, we have earned the trust and recognition of our customers, who drop by drop, are transported through time and space to the Origin, and connect with the lives of those who intervene in their value chain, until they reach those peasant hands of the men and women who cultivated it. XERIDAS COFFEE, a specialty coffee committed to quality, building the social fabric and preserving the environment.

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La Esperanza

Single Farm

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Hacienda Cafetera La Pradera

Single Farm, Mill, Exporter
Bird Friendly, Con Manos de Mujer, Organic, Rainforest Alliance

La Pradera is a family-owned organic estate farm in Aratoca, Santander. Four generations of the Daza Bautistas have been directly involved in the production, processing and export of exceptional, organic, specialty coffee. In the early 1970’s Mr. Héctor Daza began the transformation of the family farm into a coffee paradise, by planting diverse timber and fruit trees, creating a beautiful shade canopy for the different varieties of coffee he planted. This was the starting point of a lifelong commitment to environmental practices at La Pradera. The 1980’s were a challenging period, with low market prices and adverse climate conditions. I, Oscar Daza, third generation, assumed the leadership of La Pradera, with a vision to produce extraordinary specialty coffees, certified Rainforest Alliance, Birdfriendly and Organic for world markets.

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Cooperativa de Caficultores de Anserma

Cooperative, Mill, Exporter
C.A.F.E practices, UTZ Certified, FairTrade, Rainforest Alliance

We are a Cooperative of more than 2,100 coffee growers, in the southwest of Caldas, with an average farm size of 2.4 hectares. 30% of our members are women. All the profits are invested in the coffee growers looking for their welfare. Our goal is to market coffee and other agricultural products efficiently, through the democratic and participative integration of coffee growers in the cooperative's area of action. We create new products or services and implement new channels and/or processes to tap new markets, generating added value for members and families. Our project Todos al Agua (All for Water) focuses on cleaning and preserving water resources. It was created when members reported their children were constantly becoming ill due to contaminated streams. Through Proyectos Veredales we set up a football field for kids to play football safely. Read more here www.cooperativaanserma.com.co.

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Productores de la Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta

Association
FairTrade, Organic

We are a non-profit association, legally constituted on March 16, 2009, made up of families of small producers who grow in the municipalities of Ciénaga, Santa Marta and Fundación. We guarantee the quality of life of our associates, through the management of Socio-Environmental projects with resources from the Fairtrade Social Premium and managing with public entities, government NGOs, embassies, etc. We produce and market organic parchment coffee with the standards: JAS, NOP, CE and resolution 0187, certified as Organic by Kiwa BCS and Fair Trade FLO ID 23766, with FLOCERT, with experience in commercial contracts with different exporters such as CI Lohas Beans, National Federation of Coffee Growers, Expocafé, Grupo Tap.

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Finca Nápoles

Single Farm
Organic

Finca Nápoles is located in the heart of Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, a mountain range near the Caribbean coast. Ranging from 1250m to 1800m above sea level, our organic farm is surrounded by natural reserves, a refuge for many of Colombia's endemic species. Finding us involves a motorbike journey on steep and bumpy roads up to the settlement of Palmor, in the town of Ciénaga. It can be quite the adventure, but we know many experienced drivers that make it fun - and safe. Palmor is known by many as the coffee capital of Magdalena, the main producing department in Sierra Nevada. Nápoles was founded by my father Cristoval Tobar in 1960. Born in Tolima, he came to Palmor looking for a peaceful place to live. A hard-working man, he made Nápoles prosper and helped many people in the settlement over the years.

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Cofinet

Single Farm, Trader, Mill, Exporter
FairTrade, Organic

Colombia produces coffee that tastes great and has sustainable credentials grown by producers with a long history in farming and heaps of experience. Today, 40% of the coffee the country exports is sold as specialty, and producers receive up to 96% of the FOB price. Taste profiles have always been varied but farmers are so innovative that the concept of regional flavours got old. Every cup is a surprise. 

Quality foundations      

Colombia is the world’s largest producer of Washed Arabica - and they do it well. Unable to compete in volume with Brazil, the National Federation of Coffee Growers of Colombia (FNC) created a strategy around quality. They defined production and processing standards and rewarded coffee with good physical characteristics with better pricing. 

(Photo: Hacienda Cafetera La Pradera)

The standards set by the FNC spread because the organisation buy large volumes of coffee and offers a purchase guarantee. Their base price is defined by how much exportable green coffee they can get from 94 kg of parchment, known as the factor de rendimiento. If 94 kg of parchment yields more than 70 kg of Excelso, the farmer is paid above the base price. If it yields less, payment is below the base price.  

A leap from physical to sensory standards 

(Photo: Hacienda Cafetera La Pradera)

These physical quality standards have existed for a long time. For a specialty coffee buyer today, they might not seem all that relevant. But this is one of the reasons why Colombian coffee tastes so good today. Historically, their Washed lots are cleaner, lighter and more acidic than standard Brazilian or Peruvian coffees. 

This is also one of the reasons why Colombian producers experiment as much as they do. They already had a good understanding of fermentation for the Washed process. That was a solid foundation to explore other processing methods and differentiate. Especially as more producers started getting export licenses. 

Sustainable and always available

Colombia is also a popular origin because it has coffee available all year. Unlike most other countries, it has two dry and two wet seasons. This triggers two periods of flowering and, as a result, two harvests. Most of the country has a main harvest from March to June. That’s responsible for 60% of Colombia’s volume. The remaining 40% is produced from September to December. It’s called a fly crop or mitaca

Hacienda Casa Blanca

The country is also a big producer of certified coffee. Two-thirds of Colombia’s volume has at least one certification, such as 4C, Rainforest Alliance or Fairtrade. The Northern departments, like Santander and Magdalena, also produce a lot of organic shade-grown coffee. It’s a commercial differentiator from the Coffee Axis. And it makes sense because the area gets more sun exposure. 

Beyond its environmental credentials, Colombia protects farmers from shocks in the futures market. In 2020, the government and the FNC established a Coffee Price Stabilization Fund to guarantee a minimum floor rate should market prices drop below the cost of production.

The wild version of Panama

Hoyo Frío

Specialty coffee production changed a lot in Colombia in the last five years. Farmers taking baby steps in new processing methods now have super diverse coffees they export themselves. They also experiment with all sorts of varieties. Gesha lost its crown as the “golden seed” and made way for Tabi, Caturra Chiroso, Bourbon Aji, Bourbon Papayo, and others.

Among younger producers, co-fermented and infused coffees are all the rage. These are usually micro-lots. But more farmers are challenging themselves to produce large volumes of Naturals despite the weather, which can be too humid for long periods of sun-drying. The new generation wants to make a name for itself as Panama did - but they’re wilder. 

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Roasting colombian coffee with Crankhouse and April Coffee

Roasting colombian coffee with Crankhouse and April Coffee

June 6, 2023
Algrano

Specialty coffee roasters Dave Stanton of Crankhouse and Joseph Fisher of April Coffee share their approach to roasting and profiles for Colombian coffees. Read about the country's processing history and the versatility of the coffees produced here.

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