Morning Good Coffee
Papua New Guinea Organic
- FLAVOR: Dark Chocolate, Brown Sugar, Green Tea, Pipe Tobacco, Stone Fruit
- BODY: Heavy
- ACIDITY: Medium
- PROCESS: Washed
- MOISTURE: 11.20%
- PACKAGING: 65lb box
Typica And Bourbon Green Coffee
Typica and Bourbon are the two most common arabica coffee varietals and are often the parent plants from which subsequent varietals are based. Their lineage can be traced back to when coffee was first taken from Ethiopia to Yemen. Typica was most likely brought to Indonesia by Dutch traders, who also disseminated the plant further around the world. Bourbon, on the other hand, can be traced back to France’s Bourbon Island (now La Réunion), where it spread to Africa via French missionaries.
Quality Papua New Guinea Green Coffee
In 2021, the National Institute of Standards and Industrial Technology (NISIT) revamped the grading protocol for coffee from PNG that streamlines the process. Green coffees from PNG with an A grade green should have a balanced, uniform, clean cup with a distinct body, acidity, and aroma.
Washed Process Green Coffee
In the “washed” or “wet” process coffee cherries are floated and sorted to ensure consistent ripeness and to remove any defective cherries. The seeds (coffee beans) are then removed from their skins using depulping machines and typically moved to fermentation tanks to remove the mucilage—the remaining fruit remnants. Afterward, the coffee is dried until it reaches the optimal moisture level.
Washed processing has become widely popular. The cup profile of washed coffees tends to reflect the terroir of the coffee. The processing method allows the growing conditions, the region, and the true character of the coffee to shine through.
Organic Unroasted Coffee Beans
Many coffee origins grow coffee organically by default, but for coffee to be certified as USDA Organic, the farm and supply chain must adhere to strict standards from tree to cup. The standards encompass criteria such as the health of the soil, management of pests and weeds, the genetics of the coffee trees, environmental impacts that result from agricultural activity, and more. Accreditation is a rigorous process that can take up to three years and is a huge investment for producers. That’s why many who naturally farm organically may still lack certification despite their sustainable efforts.
Green Coffee From Papua New Guinea
Out of the nine million people in PNG, around 2.5 million (30%) are involved in coffee. Exports of coffee account for approximately 6% (US$72 million) of the country’s GDP, and it’s the second leading agricultural product after palm oil. With numbers like that, most people expect unroasted PNG green coffee to be highly valued locally, but production levels tell a different story. Learn more in our Papua New Guinea Green Coffee Origin Report.