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Guatemala Chimaltenango Tecpán

Light roasts have a spark of acidity that cuts through core flavors of caramel, cocoa, and nut, whereas darker roasts extract bittersweet chocolate, and a deep-toned finish. City to Full City+. Good for espresso.

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Full Cupping Notes

Tecpán showed robust bittersweetness across a wide range of roasts, albeit surprisingly bright in light roasts, whereas Full City and beyond almost seemed dredged in dark cocoa roast flavors. The fragrance and aroma have sweet caramel and milk chocolate notes, with mild hints of pistachio, and spice. City roasts have very nice acidity for Guatemalan coffee, which brings out a background note that was apple-like, and also brought out a malic vibrance. Caramel sugars and mild cocoa tones are core cup flavors, with nutty-sweet hints of raw almond and macadamia. Chocolate bittersweets are much more developed as you pass the City+ mark. My Full City roast had a cocoa/nut flavor profile that comes through like cocoa-dusted almonds, and chocolate-covered pistachio nuts. Evaluated as espresso, Tecpán yields a bittersweet structure, with notes of high % cacao bar, salted caramel, and a spark of citrus zest up front yields to a long lasting, deep-toned finish.

  • Process Method Wet Process (Washed)
  • Cultivar Caturra Types, Bourbon Types, Typica Types, Modern Hybrids
  • Farm Gate Yes

The city of Tecpán sits in the northwest corner of the Chimaltenango Municipality, about an hour and a half from Guatemala City by car. Tecpán in Nahuatl language means “Mansion of the gods” or “mansion de los dioses” in Spanish, and it was the town of Iximche in Tecpán that was declared the first capital city of Guatemala by the Spanish. It's a very high altitude zone, and known for cold climate, especially at the higher reaches. This region has a median altitude of 2000 meters, which along with the cold climate, means slower coffee cherry maturation and very dense coffee beans. Not always a recipe for a good cup, it certainly helps to have a dense organic structure for sugar caramelization, and Tecpán has proved to be a very sweet, balanced cup. Bourbon and Caturra cultivars are also part of that recipe, the dominant cultivars of the region, and you see smaller amounts of Catuaí, Typica, and Anacafe-90 mixed in too. This coffee is a small producer blend from Tecpán, most farms with much less than 10 hectares of land. The effort is organized by a local farmer named Aurelio Salvador, who has taken charge of buying cherry from those in neighboring villages and coordinating the deliveries to the La Azotea mill on the other side of Chimaltenango, where the coffee is then centrally processed.

Region Tecpán, Chimaltenango
Processing Wet Process (Washed)
Drying Method Patio Sun-Dried
Arrival date July 2023 Arrival
Lot size 37
Bag size 69 KG
Packaging GrainPro Liner
Farm Gate Yes
Cultivar Detail Bourbon, Caturra, Catuaí, Typica, Anacafe-90
Grade SHB EP
Appearance .6 d/300gr, 15-17 Screen
Roast Recommendations City to Full City+
Type Farm Gate
Recommended for Espresso Yes