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                                                          too. Packaging of coffee brands in Rwanda often include
                                                          farmers or washing station name, roast degree and date of
                                                          roasting attesting to the consumer growth in sophistication.
                                                              Steps are being taken in Rwanda to ensure high qual-
                                                          ity standards in both exported coffee and locally consumed
                                                          coffee. NAEB and many qualified technicians, consultants,
                                                          roasters, agencies, AST and CQI trainers, as example, offer
                                                          education from barista to farmers, cup to processing, and
                                                          roasting. This time during my stay in Kigali, I witnessed a
                                                          massive growth in specialty coffee cafes in the city offering
                                                          a variety of Rwanda coffee, identified by growing region,
                                                          washing station or farmers. Kivu Noir and Question Coffee
                                                          are  two  that  come  to  mind,  there  are  several.  All  to  the
                                                          delight of the local population who have taken speciality
                                                          Rwanda coffee to heart.
                                                              As with any agriculture product there are challenges.
 Sherri during a cup tasting with friends                 Of  note  in  Rwanda  and  other  African  nations,  a  defect
                                                          known as Potato Taste Defect, or PTD—occurs in coffees
                                                          from Rwanda, Western Uganda, Burundi, and the Demo-
                                                          cratic Republic of Congo.  In my experience, PTD is a very
 Previously known through exporters and importers   Rwandan specialty coffee is cultivated by hundreds of   sneaky defect. It can be noted to occur totally randomly
 and the well-established Cup of Excellence program, the   thousands of skilled smallholder farmers utilizing washing   and without any real signs of the defect prior to roasting.
 Best of Rwanda is an initiative which is owned by NAEB   stations  and  a  system  of  day  lots  to  separate  and  isolate   It smells and tastes exactly like what the name implies:
 with the guidance and support of various agencies includ-  individual lots in the competition.   raw potatoes. It is believed to be a result of an infestation
 ing  USAID.  The  national  and  international  juries  took   Third party auditors who monitored and verified each   of the antestia insect which attacks the sweetest of coffee
 place in the new NAEB Laboratory, which is ISO certified,   entry from washing stations and each lot was assigned a   cherries. In turn the plant may have a natural defense and
 built  two  years  ago  with  funding  of  a  European  Union   code  for  competition  which  was  verified  throughout  the   produce  a  chemical  reaction  resulting  in  potato  taste.
 association. The Best of Rwanda was the official inaugural   sessions allowing each sample to be blind cupped. Washing   NAEB and others are working tirelessly to identify and
 cupping event in the large fully outfitted laboratory built   stations and small holder farmers were allowed to submit   eradicate this defect. I will say, cupping with both nation-
 to SCA premium campus standards.   only two entries. This accountability brought responsibili-  al and international jurors, there is always disappointment
 The Best of Rwanda country wide coffee competition   ty to the entrants to select their best as a first step to qual-  in the cupping room when a sample is disqualified as a
 and  auction  supports  smallholder  farmers  and  promotes   ity within the BoR competition.   result of PTD. I will strongly advise, the defect itself can
 sustainable coffee production. Despite its small size, Rwan-  Roasters  and  consumer  preferences  have  become   be just one bean in a hundred if not more beans and may
 da’s  diverse  terroir  offers  ideal  conditions  for  growing   more sophisticated over the past decade. Ideally, consum-  not  appear  again  in  the  entire  delicious  lot.  To  ensure
 specialty coffee. There are 400,000 small holder farmers   ers and roasters should be willing to pay top dollar for top   protocol  during  Best  of  Rwanda,  we  did  disqualify  lots
 and more than 300 washing stations each above 1600 meters   quality. Price wars may exist but not to anyone’s advantage   which exhibited the defect as a precaution.
 which  greatly  contributes  to  the  quality  of  the  growing   particularly to the farmers. In roads to origins have be-
 coffee cherries. Coffees grown are Arabica red bourbon.   come the norm for “coffee hunters” seeking unique high
 Some people may assume all coffee of Africa is similar   quality  coffees.  Collaborations  between  coffee  farmers
 or only know the name of Ethiopia as a source for African   and  buyers  are  being  formed  through  the  relationships
 specialty coffee. In the past, Kenya was the shining star.   built within the Best of Rwanda. Trust, traceability and
 Within each specialty coffee producing country lies diver-  quality are the building blocks for future generations of
 sity.  The  agricultural  techniques  used,  terroir,  which  in-  coffee farmers and coffee lovers.
 cludes  elevation,  soil  competition,  variety,  harvest  and   Coffee was introduced by Germans in the early 1900s,
 processing affect its taste.  A short, generalized taste profile   it is dominated by mainly ‘bourbon’ type of Arabica coffees.
 exists;  Rwanda  -  shiny  citrus  brightness  balanced  with   Ten  years  ago,  Rwanda’s  coffee  was  100%  fully  washed.
 floral and mandarin orange notes, structured and balanced.   Today, fully washed may be the top contender in percentage   Burundi - might be
 Reminiscent of a Sauvignon Blanc with clarity and translu-  of coffee exported but Natural, Honey and Experimental
 cence and honeyed finish.   processing has been introduced to the delight of the con-  more like a Merlot, red wine,
 Burundi - might be more like a Merlot, red wine, spices,   sumers and speaks well to the adaptation of the farmers to
 deep, complex. Kenya- cranberries, Cabernet with dimension,   evolving tastes. Consumer preferences brought to Rwanda   spices, deep, complex.
 and Ethiopia - floral, intense perfume with clarity.   by buyers have influenced the marketing within the country


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