Rwanda Gasharu 15+ Washed

Cola, blackcurrant, fruit tea
Log in to view price
Bag Weight 60 KG BAG
Harvest Season 2024/25
Status Spot
Lot Number P8002641-3
  • 19 Bag(s)
Log In To Buy / Sample

About This Coffee

This fully washed lot is from Gasharu washing station Wimana on the shores of Lake Kivu, Nyamasheke-Gatare district, Western Rwanda. Gasharu work with 1,075 smallholder farmers in the region, which is just a stone's throw from Nyangwe Forest National Park, one of the largest and best preserved mountain rainforests in central Africa, home to an esimated 25% of Africa's primates (excluding humans).

Gasharu coffee is managed by Valentin Kamenyi. Growing up in rural Rwanda in the 1990s, coffee had a mythical quality to it. "I was told coffee beans were sold abroad to make bullets. This was intriguing to me as I always imagined bullets to be magical, small and yet so noisy and powerful,” he recalls. Of course these child hood tales are now a thing of the past, yet coffee still carries special significance to him as the heart of his community. 

 

Origin Rwanda
Subregion Wimana, Nyamasheke-Gatare District, Western Province
Harvest Season 2024/25
Producer Type Washing Station
Wet Mill Gasharu
Processing Washed
Growing Altitude 1600m - 2100m
Plant Species Arabica
Variety Bourbon
Coffee Grade RWA CA FW SC 15+
Screen Size 15 Up
Bag Weight 60 KG BAG
Bag Types Grain Pro / Ecotact

The Procees

Ripe cherries are carefully selected - first by hand and then by floatation. The cherries are depulped and fermented in clean water for 15 hours. The coffee is then thoroughly washed in clean water grading channels, then soaked for a further 14 hours. After soaking the coffee dried on raised African beds, first under shade and then in the sun, for an average of 15-20 days. The coffee is turned and handpicked constantly as it dries to ensure consistent drying and remove physical defects.

History of Coffee in Rwanda 

The commercialization of coffee came about gradually in Rwanda and coffee was always produced on smallholder farms. Independence brought some improvement to the coffee infrastructure as the government established more modern and centralizing processing. But this meant the government set the price they would pay for coffee and farmers had no other options. There was no focus on quality because there was no incentive whatsoever. Despite much of the coffee being Bourbon, there was no sorting or grading so all the coffee was commercial grade. Rwanda exported 642,000 bags of coffee in 1993 and 447,000 in 1994. Then, as something of a stark reminder of the genocide, Rwanda exported a mere 22,000 bags in 1995. Today, Rwanda exports only 43% of what it did in 1993, but current exports represent much greater value because for the last 20 years the focus has been on quality rather than quantity. Rwanda’s ideal growing conditions are no longer wasted on poor processing. New washing stations have opened in all coffee growing regions, innovative cupping labs that arrive built into shipping containers, and cooperatives have been established. For the last 10 years, Rwandan specialty coffees consistently rank among the finest in the world.

  • Subregion Wimana, Nyamasheke-Gatare District, Western Province
  • Producer Type Washing Station
  • Wet Mill Gasharu
  • Processing Washed
  • Bag Types Grain Pro / Ecotact
  • Plant Species Arabica
  • Variety Bourbon
  • Min Growing Altitude 1600m
  • Max Growing Altitude 2100m
  • Screen Size 15 Up
  • On Sale No
  • Top Lot No
  • Price Per Kg £9.40
  • Status Spot
  • Coffee Grade RWA CA FW SC 15+
  • CTRM Contract Number P8002641-3
  • Origin Rwanda
  • Warehouse Vollers Group Uk