Description
Coffee Flavour : Milk chocolate, biscuit, marshmallow
We offer coffee roasted in different forms that suits your favourite way of making coffee : If you would like your beans ground please order and add a note in checkout stating which form from the following
Delivery Times : To ensure all coffee is as fresh as you possible can get we do not stock ourselves, Ozone is based on the same estate as ourselves, if you order we will order and pick up, this may delay shipping your order by a day depending on when you order
Beans - Roasted and ready to be freshly ground by you, for those that like to take their time
French Press - Cafetiere - Fill and sit down ready when you are
Medium Filter - For the coffee machine enthusiasts who just need coffee always ready to go
Espresso - Roasted and ground for those that want or need a good punch of coffee
Coarse Filter - Jug The classic coffee drinker who like to brew up on the stove
Fine Filter - The finest grind possible
Coffee Information
Think of a Chocolate Teacake - milk chocolate, then creamy marshmallow sweetness and a delicate biscuit on the finish. All of that’s carried by a lovely creamy and full bodied mouthfeel.
Gloria Rodríguez is a woman you may well know if you've been brewing with us for a while, as we’ve been buying her amazing coffee since 2009. She is a fourth-generation coffee grower who, with the support of her siblings, oversees six farms in the Apaneca-Ilamatepec mountain range, totalling thirty-eight hectares: San José, Mamatita, El Porvenir, Nejapa, Nueva Granada, and La Lagunita. Gloria has broken gender barriers in an industry traditionally dominated by men, personally supervising every step at the farm level.
The Salvadorean department of Ahuachapán sits in the west of the country, with the lofty Apaneca-Ilamatepec Range and the Cerro Grande de Apaneca rising on its southern edge. The mountain slopes of Finca San José, at an average altitude of 1,500 meters above sea level, are fully shaded by trees that help preserve the coffee crop and support the local ecosystem. The farm is home to diverse wildlife and is located on the northwestern slope of an extinct volcanic crater, featuring a unique microclimate with an average temperature of 17°C and rich, loamy clay soil ideal for specialty coffee production. The farm primarily produces red Bourbon, with smaller amounts of orange and yellow Bourbon, as well as Elefante. The volcano crater also contains a small lagoon, "Laguna de Las Ninfas," known for its abundance of water lilies.
Through the generations, Finca San Jose has passed through the hands of many committed farmers, beginning in 1815 when José María Rodriguez and Josefina Rodriguez (Gloria's great-grandparents) planted the first coffee trees with their own hands. It has since passed down the line through José's son, Israel Rodriguez, then followed by Jose Maria Rodriguez. Jose Maria took care of the farm until it came to Gloria as the most recent owner. In its original incarnation, the farm was once large but was divided among Gloria’s father and his three brothers. Her father later bought back land from one brother, recombining it into the San José we know today, which is still relatively small by El Salvador standards at around 10 hectares.
San Jose is Gloria’s favourite of her farms. Until very recently, all the plants there were planted by her father – its productivity has been dropping off as the plants get older so she’s starting to replant now, but she’s also sad to have to remove those coffee trees her father planted. So far, about a third of the plants are new, whilst two thirds are around 60 years old.
One of the interesting things about Gloria’s farms is that her team, run by the foreman Tonio, still use a lot of traditional techniques and systems from El Salvador. One unique example of this are the techniques called “agobio” and “agobio de raíz”. The English for Agobio is burden and refers to how a coffee tree bends when its branches are laden with fruit. Agobio involves bending a young coffee plant at its base and running it horizontal. Upright branches are grown off this, which have their own branches. This effectively allows one seedling to provide four or more coffee plants with a shared root. Agobio de raíz is even more complicated, as it involves bending the young plant at the root and growing the uprights out of the soil. These traditional techniques are super interesting and largely forgotten on newer farms which have taken a more modern, standardised approach. It is a pleasure to see traditional Salvadorean methods kept alive.
Gloria works under strict specialty coffee standards across all her farms. These include only fully ripe cherries being harvested, careful milling and appreciative pruning. Coffee pickers are selected from her staff based on their experience and passion, and their understanding of the requirements to obtain high-quality coffee, and Gloria supervises the whole process directly with the support of Antonio 'Tonio' Avelino - her farm foreman.
