Ethiopia - Sidama - Daye Bensa
We taste: super clean and floral with notes of dandelion, chamomile, lime zest and Dr. Pepper complemented by a silky body and a sparkling, juicy acidity
Producer: 650 coffee producers organized around the Bensa Washing Station
Region: Bensa - Sidama Zone - Southern Nations, Nationalities and Peoples Region (SNNPR) - Ethiopia
Elevation: 2,200 meters above sea level
Process: Fully-washed
Varietal: Indigenous heirloom varietals
Coffee Origin Info*
Truly a story of local entrepreneurship, this superlatively fragrant and sweet coffee came to be through a producer group founded by Bensa district natives in 1996. The neighboring Bensa and Arbegona districts reach some of the highest elevations in all of Ethiopia; in the right hands, coffee grown here has proven capable of pushing the limits of what Sidama coffee genetics can show us. This fully washed lot, from smallholders in the Boreta village, is sweetly perfumed with chrysanthemum and jasmine blossoms, a range of autumn fruits, and subtle but decadent caramelized sugars.
Welcome to Eastern Sidama
The Sidama Zone has long been considered a kind of gateway to Ethiopia’s southern coffees. This is true, as Sidama is the first producing zone on the way south from Addis Ababa. It has also been true in the cup: Sidama has been known for having a robust and stable union of more than 50 coops that turn out predictably honey-like, herbaceous fully washed coffee year after year, and almost always with earlier availability and lower prices than neighboring Gedeo (a.k.a. “Yirgacheffe”). Perhaps because of its stability, the sprawling zone has also seen little disruption to its union presence and hallmark washed profiles.
It is in Sidama’s eastern districts of Bensa and Arbegona that the zone has spent the past few years reinventing itself, one innovative group at a time. For the past four harvests, we have seen several private processors turn out incredible coffees that reset our expectations for Sidama. Some have used transformative anaerobic fermentations, whereas others, like this one, are nothing more than sound traditional washed processing fundamentals applied to a select subset of the region’s coffee—some of the highest and most genetically gifted on the planet.
Coffees this good wouldn’t be possible without a divine terroir to begin with. Eastern Sidama runs up against the mighty Harenna Forest National Park, Ethiopia’s largest indigenous forest, whose elevation surpasses 3,000 meters and whose old growth tree species can be found across eastern Sidama, whose presence boosts natural shade and soil health. Were this not enough, the elevation alone is enough to make a coffee buyer’s eyes water, with coffee farms as high as 2300 meters above sea level. Harvest here pushes past the end of the calendar year.
Daye Bensa Coffee Export PLC & Boreta Village
Daye Bensa is one of the entrepreneurial groups pushing Sidama’s coffee to new levels. Originally founded in 1996 by two brothers from the Bensa district, the organization now operates 2 of its own large estates and manages over 15 processing stations in eastern Sidama.
This lot is centrally processed coffee from smallholders in the Boreta village, part of the Arbegona district, north of Bensa. Growers here are at an average of 2,200 meters in elevation, farming entirely on small, diversified plots typically devoted to coffee, sugar cane, spices, subsistence vegetables, and enset—a fruit-less relative of the banana tree whose pulp is scraped and packed into cakes, fermented underground, and then sliced and toasted as kocho, a staple starch.
Processing begins with fresh picked cherry that is floated for density and hand-sorted to remove any imperfections. Cherry is then depulped ,and the parchment is fermented slowly—36 to 48 hours—due to the low ambient temperatures in the region and the replenishment of cold groundwater throughout the process. Drying takes 12-15 days and wet parchment is often covered during the searingly-hot afternoon hours to prevent it from cracking.
Once complete, dried parchment is conditioned in local warehouses before being transported to Daye Bensa’s Addis Ababa dry milling facility, where it is cleaned, sorted, and prepped for export.
*Provided by Royal Coffee
Brew Guide
Hario V60 Dripper
This recipe highlights the clean floral, bright lime notes and sweet spice character of this coffee.
Ethiopian coffees tend to be easy to over extract and also tend to draw down slower than most origins. To account for this we recommend the by-pass method and a continuous pour, slightly faster than usual.
Recipe
Coffee: 25 grams
Grind size: 4 on the Fellow Ode (medium-fine)
Water: 360 grams at 200˚F
Coffee to Water Ratio: 1:15.56
Brew Time: 3:00
Method
1. Rinse filter
2. Add ground coffee
3. Start timer and saturate grounds with 75g water.
4. Let bloom 30 seconds.
5. Slowly pour another 255g of water on the coffee, taking care to evenly saturate the grounds. You should end up with 330g of water poured by about 1:45.
6. After all water draws down, remove the brewer from your carafe. Add an additional 30g of hot water to the brewed coffee. Swirl carafe and serve.
Brew Guide
We love the Chemex for its ability to produce a super clean and delicate cup. This recipe highlights the clean, delicate and nuanced flavor profile of this coffee.
Recipe
Coffee: 40 grams
Grind size: 5 on the Fellow Ode (medium)
Water: 600g at 200˚F
Coffee to Water Ratio: 1:15
Brew Time: 4:00
Method
1. Rinse filter
2. Add ground coffee
3. Start timer and saturate grounds with 100g water.
4. Let bloom 30 seconds.
5. Pour water on the coffee in 100g pulses until you reach 600g. Taking care to evenly saturate the grounds and maintain a steady bed height. You should have all water poured by 2:30.
6. Swirl brewer and let water draw through grounds.
7. Brew should finish at 4:00.
8. Remove filter and discard.
9. Swirl brewer, pour and enjoy.