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Africa: Uganda

Map of the Uganda
 

Coffee farmers in Uganda, Sipi Falls sub-region.
 
Current Crop Comments:

We finally found a great lot of Organic Uganda for 2006, rustic, low acid, heavy body, slightly fruited. I thought the Uganda we offered last year, the Mbale, was a very nice cup with low acidity and fruited aspects, and the Sipi Falls from 2004 was excellent too. But to find those coffees I had to wade through a lot of seriously defective samples. Uganda can do a lot better than this, but has been a commercial-grade coffee origin for too long. As always, I cup all the array of samples I can get, including a couple compelling offerings that came direct from smallholder farms. But as of yet (March 06) I haven't found one that rose to the occasion. Sadly, there was one nice Organic lot that arrived in January that I really liked, but the container was pre-sold to a large roaster who was simply going to blend with it. There was nothing I could do...

 

While Arabica was introduced at the beginning of the 1900's, Robusta coffee is indigenous to the country, and has been a part of Ugandan life for centuries. The variety of Wild Robusta Coffee still growing today in Uganda's rain forests are thought to be some of the rarest examples of naturally occurring coffee trees anywhere in the world. The coffee trees are intercropped with traditional food crops and grown in the shade of banana trees and other shade trees. In these self-sustaining conditions, coffee is left to grow naturally, flowering on average twice a year.

Uganda has the unfortunate circumstance of being landlocked, and needing good relations with its neighbors to move its coffee crop to a port city. Transportation bottlenecks can result in containers of full of steaming coffee beans stuck on the back of a truck or a dock somewhere ...not good for quality! But in recent years the problems of unstable East African politics and weak infrastructure seem to be improving, judging from the excellent quality coffee coming from the Northern Bugisu region along the Kenya border. Good marks are the Mbale Bugisu Coffee Factory and the Budadiri Coffee Factory -names of the mills where the coffee are prepared. Good Ugandan coffees are both unique among East African coffees and of intense character. Germany has been a strong buyer of Ugandas arabica crop but two years ago the outrageous Java prices resulted in numerous containers appearing in the US as a Java substitute.

Coffees from politically unstable regions, especially East Africa and the 10-year civil war in Uganda, bring up ethical issues. But the plain fact is this: coffee is a cash crop. It is grown by 300,000 small-holder farmers in Uganda. It is 95% of the Ugandan exports and 2,800,000 people rely on it for a living! Most production is Robusta, and the prices they get are low. Arabica farming is more work, but the rewards are greater! Quality in coffee is a way to break pay farmers better. Here you have the opportunity to buy the best of Ugandan coffee...

Coffee Farms:
500,000: 93% small native farms
Harvest Times:
September - December
Coffee Workers:
2,800,000
Grading,
Processing :

Highest = AA

Shade Grown:
Mixed: interplanted with subsistence crops
Certified Organic:
Certified Organic coming soon (mid-2001): all coffee grown in mixed agricultural environment
Major Coffee Growing Regions:

Bugisu/Mount Elgon region at Kenya border,
Wugars

Rank in Production::
2nd in Africa (due to large Robusta crop)
7th in World
Botanical Cultivars:
Kents,
Typica
Introduced:
1900, Introduced from Malawi

Our Ugandan Offerings: Please refer to our Reference Page for definitions of terms and cupping numbers used below.

Uganda Organic Bugisu
Country: Uganda Grade: HB Region: Mt. Elgon region, Mbale Mark:
Organic Bugisu
Processing: Wet Process Crop: March 2006 Arrival Appearance: 1.8 d/300gr, 16-18 screen Varietal: not known
Dry Fragrance (1-5) 3.2 Notes: Mount Elgon lies in the Eastern reaches of the country, straddling the Uganda/Kenya border. Judging by its enormous base it is thought that Mt Elgon was once the tallest mountain in Africa. The coffee shambas extend up and down the cliff faces, making use of natural water gullies and forest cover to extract moisture from the soil. The Sipi Falls is one of the great natural features of the Elgon region where this coffee originates, with small holder farms between 1,600 and 1,900 meters. It is a steep and difficult terrain to traverse in the rainy seasons; often there are no roads, only dirt tracks which are washed away by the rains. But the Bagisu tribesmen who live on the mountain have become expert coffee farmers and have developed their own transportation methods: Donkeys! It is also woth noting that this is the only certified organic coffee from Uganda at this time, and is also Utz Kapeh certified (this is what we call "fair trade lite." For more information visit www.utzkapeh.org). This cup is so different from other East African coffees, with a full body lower acidity than neighboring coffee origins; low acidty, heavy body, rustic aspects. It is more reminicent of Indonesian cup character than citric acidic coffees from Kenya and others. It took time for us to find a lot we really liked, something with some positive secondary characteristics. Here we have the deep tone range (lack of bright acidity), heavy body that reminds me almost of the oily Java mouthfeel, and mild rustic notes. But there is a unique raw Papaya flavor here too, giving added dimension to the cup.

 

Wet Aroma (1-5) 3.4
Brightness - Acidity (1-10) 8.0
Flavor - Depth (1-10) 8.5
Body - Mouthfeel (1-5) 4
Finish - Aftertaste (1-10) 8.1
Cupper's Correction (1-5) 0 Intensity/Prime Attribute: Medium intensity / Heavy body, rustic and fruited character.
add 50 50 Roast: I had very good roasts at Full City and Full City +
Score (Max. 100) 85.2 Compare to: A unique E African coffee with an almost Indonesian character

This review kept here for information purposes only - Uganda is out until the next crop comes in. - Maria 11/3/06

 
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