Voted most Favorite roaster by Radio Norge & Back to back Barista NM with our flagship espresso // Ugly Christmas sweater season is very close! Christmas coffees available today. // This months Club coffeefor November is an Ethiopian natural: Washing station: Mundayo. We have a few club spots open to join. Last call November 21st.// Alps HQ Open Mon-Fri Kl 1030-1530

Alps Artist Edition: The Animal Conflict
Alps Artist Edition: The Animal Conflict
Alps Artist Edition: The Animal Conflict
Alps Artist Edition: The Animal Conflict
Alps Artist Edition: The Animal Conflict
Alps Artist Edition: The Animal Conflict
Alps Artist Edition: The Animal Conflict

Alps Artist Edition: The Animal Conflict

Regular price 149,90 kr Sale

Introducing our new Alps Artist Edition, featuring local artists in Hallingdal and beyond. Creativity, coffee, and collaborations will always be part of the Scandinavian Alps ethos. The first artist collaboration is with Ben Siegenthaler from Switzerland, who now resides in Hemsedal with his Norwegian wife and 3 small kids. When he is not being Super Dad he works for the community, star barista, and an outdoor adventure guide.

Title collage: The Animal Conflict 

 The Farm notes & story

Origin: Ethiopia
Washing Station: Ayla Bombe
Altitude (MASL): 2200
Process: natural
Harvest Season: Nov - Jan
Varieties: Heirloom

Taste Profile: Caramel, cooked strawberry, and jammy red grape flavors with clean fruit-like sweetness and winey acidity.

Testi Ayla Washing Station was founded in 2010 and became part of the Testi group in 2016. It now serves about 375 smallholder farmers in the village of Bombe in Sidama, near the Bombe Mountain. Producers here own an average of 2.5 hectares and grow varieties such as Mikicho and Setami, which are local coffees.

Coffees in Ethiopia are typically grown on very small plots of land by farmers who also grow other crops. The majority of smallholders will deliver their coffee in cherry to a nearby washing station or central processing unit, where their coffee will be sorted, weighed, and paid for or given a receipt. Coffee is then processed, usually washed or natural, by the washing station and dried on raised beds.

The washing stations serve as many as several hundred to sometimes a thousand or more producers, who deliver cherry throughout the harvest season: The blending of these cherries into day lots makes it virtually impossible under normal circumstances to know precisely whose coffee winds up in which bags on what day, making traceability to the producer difficult. We do, however, make every available effort to source coffee from the same washing stations every year, through our export partners and their connections with mills and washing stations.

Typically farmers in this region don't have access to and therefore do not utilize fertilizers or pesticides in the production of coffee. 

 The artist's story