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  • Bolivia 4 Llamas Natural

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    Mango. Lime. Confectional Sugar. Allspice.

    Ships within 1 week after roast date 
    100% specialty arabica coffee beans only
    Onyx's coffee beans are at their peak 2 to 3 weeks after roasting

    Origin Bolivia
    Variety Caturra
    Processing Lactic Washed
    Preferred Extraction Filter & Espresso
    Roast Level Expressive Light Agtro #125.5
    Production Roaster Diedrich CR-35

    About this coffee: 

    Founded by Bolivian changemakers Andres and Marita, 4 Llamas Coffee is a mission-driven project rooted in sustainability, innovation, and community. Grown in Caranavi’s highlands using agroforestry and avant-garde fermentation, including a vacuum-pressure natural process inspired by sous-vide. The result of this experimentation is a natural processed coffee that exudes notes of mango and lime, with a confectionary sweetness throughout.

    Brewing Recipe : 

    Espresso
    Brewing ratio 1 : 2.2
    Ground coffee 19g
    Espresso output 40g
    Brew time 25-35 seconds
    Filter
    Brewing ratio 1 : 17
    Ground coffee 20g
    Total water 300ml
    Water temperature 93ºc
    Brew time 3 minutes

    The Story:

    From the foothills of the Andes to the headwaters of the Amazon basin, 4 Llamas is helping to reshape Bolivia’s presence on the global coffee map. Rooted in a commitment to ecological balance and technical exactitude, the project fuses high-altitude terroir with a regenerative ethos, delivering coffees of uncommon clarity and complexity. The foundation is agronomic. Across their farms, 4 Llamas employs permaculture design and layered agroforestry systems, fostering polycultural resilience while preserving the ecology of the land. Their processing infrastructure reflects the same environmental intentionality, a custom-built plant reduces water consumption at scale, while an in-house treatment system addresses the environmental costs of wet milling.

    Through Familia 4 Llamas, a producer-centered initiative, the company provides technical mentorship, fermentation infrastructure, and export positioning to smallholder growers across Bolivia. These aren’t transactional relationships, they are horizontal partnerships, cultivated through mutual respect and anchored in the belief that producer dignity is essential to agricultural progress. Their approach to processing is equally progressive. While traditional washed and natural lots form part of their annual offering, the team at 4 Llamas continues to push into experimental fermentation, working with native microbial communities under carefully monitored conditions. Temperature, Brix, pH, every variable is tracked with intention, yielding cup profiles that speak not only to place, but to precision.

    NATURALLY PROCESSED COFFEE
    Natural coffees are beautiful… Okay, natural coffees are beautiful when done properly, but can be equally terrible when things go wrong. Natural processing, or dry processing, refers to the act of drying and fermenting coffee inside the cherry. Long before the age of portafilter tattoos and dual-boiler home espresso machines, coffee was picked and dried this way out of convenience. It is, to this day, still the most convenient and economically friendly way to process coffee cherries. (It’s estimated that dry-processing can use up to 90% less water than the washing process.) So why isn’t all coffee processed this way? Well, as coffee made its way across the world, it was commoditized and standardized, just like all other products spread by colonialism, but that’s a whole other story... Adding to the boom of washed processing, the natural process method can be tricky to get right, due to the delicate nature of fermentation and drying. What does all this have to do with the final cup? Well, when you leave the skin and fruit of the coffee cherry on the seed throughout fermentation and drying, that fruit begins to break down, imparting esters that influence delicate florals and big fruit notes into the seed that survive the roasting process. If it’s rushed or handled incorrectly, this fruit rot can lend off-flavors to the coffee, making the final cup “dirty” or “fermenty.”

    How is this done? It starts at harvest, with the selective harvesting of ripe coffee cherries. Only the fully mature cherries are picked, as they have the highest sugar content and flavor potential. The harvested cherries are then sorted to remove any damaged or under ripe cherries. This ensures that only the best quality cherries are used in the primary fermentation. After sorting, the cherries are spread out in thin layers on large drying beds or patios to dry naturally under the sun. (or sometimes under shade) They are periodically raked and turned to ensure even drying. This step can take several weeks depending on weather conditions. As the cherries dry, they undergo a natural fermentation process. Enzymes present in the fruit interact with the sugars and other compounds, causing chemical reactions that impact the flavor profile of the coffee. This fermentation adds complexity and fruity flavors to the final cup. During the drying/ fermentation process, the cherries must be protected from rain, humidity, pests, and mold.

    Farmers often cover the cherries with tarps during the night or when there's a risk of adverse weather. The coffee cherries are dried until they reach an optimal moisture content of around 11-12%. At this point, the cherries have shrunk, and the outer skin and fruit can be easily removed to reveal the green coffee seed inside, which is ready for roasting after a short boat ride. Basically, that single cherry begins to slowly decay, and controlling that delicate action through advanced technique and metrics allow us, lucky folks, to drink wonderfully floral and fruity coffees.