Guatemalan Red de Mujeres, or ‘network of women’ a fully washed coffee from Huehuetenango via Falcon Specialty.
Guatemalan Coffee History
Initially indigo and cochineal were the primary crop in Guatemalan. However chemical dyes signaled the beginning of the end for that industry and Guatemalans started planting coffee trees. By the mid 1800s, there were already over half a million coffee trees planted around the country. As a result of the government providing economic incentives production of coffee was encouraged.
Today, coffee continues to be the largest export crop in the country. Now coffee is grown all over Guatemala. In particular coffee is being grown in the regions of Antigua, Fraijanes, Cobán, Huehuetenango, Atitlan, San Marcos. However, today one of the biggest challenges for Guatemalan coffee, is and has always been around labour availability and cost.
Guatemalan Red de Mujeres coffee
The Red de Mujeres, or ‘network of women’, is a large group of female coffee producers covering five different areas of Huehuetenango. The group is made up of 830 women, but this particular lot comes from the San Antonio Huista area and is the product of 50 producers. Within the entire community of women there are 8 different Mayan languages spoken, highlighting the diversity of culture and language in this area of Guatemala.
All of these women have been either widowed during the 36 years of civil war in Guatemala, or were left when their husbands fled the country during the coffee crisis between 2001 and 2004. Since Huehuetenango was one of the areas hardest hit by the crisis, many people decided to give up altogether and find work elsewhere, leaving their families behind.
With the help of ACODIHUE, (a Fairtrade initiative based in Huehuetenango) these female producers have been united to market their coffee and find international buyers. ACODIHUE has also supported them in training in organic farming methods, from producing and applying fertilizers, to rust and pest control methods. Falcon has started working with ACODIHUE to improve the quality of production even further, starting with Red de Mujeres.
Note: Huehuetenango is commonly pronounced “way-way-teh-NAN-go.”
About this coffee
We specifically were looking for a a more generally great coffee, that would compliment the rest of the components in the Vineyard blend. The Red de Mujeres seemed to fit the bill. the coffee’s classic Huehuetenango flavours fitted the blend well.
Details of Guatemalan Waykan
Region: | San Antonio Huista, Huehuetenango, Gautemala, | |||||||||||||
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FARMERS: | Various smallholder farmers | |||||||||||||
Harvest: | Nov-Jan (2018). | |||||||||||||
Processing: | Fully washed and sun dried. | |||||||||||||
Altitude: | 1600 – 1850 masl. | |||||||||||||
Packaging: | GrainPro in hessian. | |||||||||||||
Cultivars: | Arabica Catuai, Caturra and Paches | |||||||||||||
Characteristics: | The coffee has smooth mouth feel, with juicy fruit and nuts. | |||||||||||||
Roast used: | Intense flame to start, then a decreasing ramp rate, flame sustained into first crack, when flame it dropped to and coffee is dumped a minute after first crack. | |||||||||||||
Certificatons: | Organic and FairTrade | |||||||||||||
Our brews: |
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