Photo of a bag of Karambi Women's Coffee Photo of a bag of Karambi Women's Coffee

Rwanda Karambi Women’s Coffee

Sorry, sold out!

Variety: Red Bourbon
Process: washed

Flavour: mandarin, floral, dried figs

Body:   Acidity:

Roast: Omni (filter + espresso)

Producer: Koakaka Cooperative

Region: Cyanika, Nyamagabe, Rwanda

Altitude: 1685 - 1870m above sea level

We’re proud to share a special micro lot with you this week – it comes from Rwanda, produced by members of the Koakaka Cooperative at the edge of the Nyungwe rainforest. The photo below shows Murekatete Joie Loire, who is the cooperative’s Head Agronomist.

Head Agronomist Murekatete Joie Loire

Koakaka are members of the International Women’s Coffee Alliance, and we’re donating $1 for every Brew Crew bag delivered this week. If you’d like to join us, you can read more about their work and donate directly through Network For Good.

Women of Karambi

Recently, the women of Koakaka’s Karambi washing station banded together to create an association, and made the decision to seperate their coffee and market it as their own.

As members of the cooperative, the members are guaranteed a minimum price for their coffee cherries, and are paid a good price to ensure the very best quality cherries are delivered. They also receive a bonus connected to the quality and prices paid for the lots of coffee.

Karambi washing station

By separating their coffees out, the women of the association are able to directly benefit from any higher prices paid specifically for their lots, rather than these profits being shared equally amongst all members.

This creates a very important and effective incentive for them to work to hard as a collective towards achieving the very best quality possible; and we think the results are evident in the cup you’re drinking.

The road to Karambi washing station

Koakaka Cooperative

In the local Kinyarwanda language, Koakaka stands for the ‘Coffee Growers’ Cooperative of Karaba’. Since 2004 it has been Fairtrade certified, and more recently has UTZ and Rainforest Alliance certifications. They’re also members of the International Women’s Coffee Alliance.

The majority of Koakaka’s members are very small-scale producers who typically own less than a quarter of a hectare of land on which they cultivate an average of only 300 trees, alongside other subsistence food crops such as maize and beans.

Processing

This coffee was processed using the washed processing method at the Karambi Washing Station, using natural spring water from the surrounding mountains.

Members of the Koakaka Cooperative are trained to only select the very ripest coffee cherries from their trees. During harvest, cherries are delivered daily to the Karambi Washing Station by foot, bicycle or driven by truck from a local pick-up point (they have 70 pick points in the surrounding area). The women have specific delivery days to the washing station to ensure their lots are processed seperately.

On delivery, the cherries are inspected and sorted to ensure only the very ripest cherries are processed. They are then sorted by weight (and any floaters removed) and pulped on the same day—almost always in the evening—using a mechanical pulper that divides the beans into three grades. The majority of this processing happens in the blue-roofed buildings you can see in the photo above.

After pulping the coffee is fermented overnight in tiled tanks (for 12 -18 hours) without water and then graded again using floatation channels that sort the coffee by weight (heaviest usually being the best).

The beans are then soaked in clean water for a further 14 hours, before being moved to raised screens for ‘wet-sorting’ by hand—this is a task almost always carried out by women.

The sorted beans are finally dried in the sun on raised screens (‘African beds’) for two weeks – you can see these in the photo at the top of this page. During this period, the coffee is turned several times a day by hand to ensure the coffee dries evenly and consistently. It is also sorted constantly, with any defects removed.

Once dry, the coffee beans are stored in parchment, in carefully labeled day lots, until they are ready for milling and export. The coffee is then sent to Kigali, from where it is milled, loaded, and shipped.

The waste water treatment plant at Karambi

Washed process coffee

Explanation here.

Red Bourbon variety

100% Red Bourbon coffee beans, provided by Melbourne Coffee Merchants and roasted by us on Gadigal land / Sydney.

Country grade: Unknown ?

Bag: ABA Certified home compostable
Label: Recyclable
Valve (on bags larger than 250g): General waste
Coffee ordered online is shipped in a recyclable cardboard box

Brewing this coffee

We recommend brewing this coffee 15–49 days post-roast. If pre-ground, brew as soon as possible. Our advice on storing coffee.

1:3
dose:yield
ratio

To brew on espresso, we recommend using 20g of beans (dose) to get 60g of espresso out (yield), during 24-28 seconds.

g dose
g yield
View the how to brew espresso (single origin) guide.

1:16.7
beans:water
ratio

To brew in infusion/fed brewers (V60, Chemex) use a ratio of 1:16.7 ratio of beans:water.

g beans
g water
View full recipes and videos in our brewguides

1:14.3
beans:water
ratio

To brew in immersion brewers (plunger, AeroPress, Kalita, batch brewer) we recommend using a 1:14.3 ratio of beans:water

g beans
g water
View full recipes and videos in our brewguides

1:12
beans:water
ratio

To brew as cold brew we recommend using a 1:12 ratio of beans:water

g beans
g water
View full recipes and videos in our brewguides

We’re proud to share a special micro lot with you this week – it comes from Rwanda, produced by members of the Koakaka Cooperative at the edge of the Nyungwe rainforest. The photo below shows Murekatete Joie Loire, who is the cooperative’s Head Agronomist.

Head Agronomist Murekatete Joie Loire

Koakaka are members of the International Women’s Coffee Alliance, and we’re donating $1 for every Brew Crew bag delivered this week. If you’d like to join us, you can read more about their work and donate directly through Network For Good.

Women of Karambi

Recently, the women of Koakaka’s Karambi washing station banded together to create an association, and made the decision to seperate their coffee and market it as their own.

As members of the cooperative, the members are guaranteed a minimum price for their coffee cherries, and are paid a good price to ensure the very best quality cherries are delivered. They also receive a bonus connected to the quality and prices paid for the lots of coffee.

Karambi washing station

By separating their coffees out, the women of the association are able to directly benefit from any higher prices paid specifically for their lots, rather than these profits being shared equally amongst all members.

This creates a very important and effective incentive for them to work to hard as a collective towards achieving the very best quality possible; and we think the results are evident in the cup you’re drinking.

The road to Karambi washing station

Koakaka Cooperative

In the local Kinyarwanda language, Koakaka stands for the ‘Coffee Growers’ Cooperative of Karaba’. Since 2004 it has been Fairtrade certified, and more recently has UTZ and Rainforest Alliance certifications. They’re also members of the International Women’s Coffee Alliance.

The majority of Koakaka’s members are very small-scale producers who typically own less than a quarter of a hectare of land on which they cultivate an average of only 300 trees, alongside other subsistence food crops such as maize and beans.

Processing

This coffee was processed using the washed processing method at the Karambi Washing Station, using natural spring water from the surrounding mountains.

Members of the Koakaka Cooperative are trained to only select the very ripest coffee cherries from their trees. During harvest, cherries are delivered daily to the Karambi Washing Station by foot, bicycle or driven by truck from a local pick-up point (they have 70 pick points in the surrounding area). The women have specific delivery days to the washing station to ensure their lots are processed seperately.

On delivery, the cherries are inspected and sorted to ensure only the very ripest cherries are processed. They are then sorted by weight (and any floaters removed) and pulped on the same day—almost always in the evening—using a mechanical pulper that divides the beans into three grades. The majority of this processing happens in the blue-roofed buildings you can see in the photo above.

After pulping the coffee is fermented overnight in tiled tanks (for 12 -18 hours) without water and then graded again using floatation channels that sort the coffee by weight (heaviest usually being the best).

The beans are then soaked in clean water for a further 14 hours, before being moved to raised screens for ‘wet-sorting’ by hand—this is a task almost always carried out by women.

The sorted beans are finally dried in the sun on raised screens (‘African beds’) for two weeks – you can see these in the photo at the top of this page. During this period, the coffee is turned several times a day by hand to ensure the coffee dries evenly and consistently. It is also sorted constantly, with any defects removed.

Once dry, the coffee beans are stored in parchment, in carefully labeled day lots, until they are ready for milling and export. The coffee is then sent to Kigali, from where it is milled, loaded, and shipped.

The waste water treatment plant at Karambi

Region

Cyanika, Nyamagabe

Altitude

1685 - 1870m above sea level

Producer

Koakaka Cooperative

Harvested

September 2017

Roast style

Omni (filter + espresso)

Map showing location of Rwanda Karambi Women's Coffee

FAQs

Do you ship Australia-wide?

Yes! We deliver freshly roasted coffee beans anywhere in Australia, with fast dispatch and eco-friendly packaging.

Do you ship internationally?

We ship beans to select international countries.

Can I buy pre-ground coffee?

Yes. You’ll see our pre-ground options during checkout.

We offer pre-ground options for different methods:
- Ground for domestic espresso (home espresso machine)
- Ground for stovetop (Bialetti)
- Ground for AeroPress / Kalita / Cold Brew / Moccamaster / Plunger / French Press (immersion style)
- Ground for V60/Chemex (pour over style)

How is your coffee ethically sourced?

We source our coffee from small producers through responsible importing companies. 95% of our green coffee beans are supplied by Caravela Coffee, Cafe Imports, and Melbourne Coffee Merchants (certified B Corporations) plus Condesa Co Lab and more.

We transparently share all the information about each coffee lot (territory of origin, producer, variety, processing method, importer, quality grade) on each coffee page. This includes blend components for our espresso blends.

We take quality sourcing very seriously, so being fully transparent about our coffee is a way to honour everyone’s efforts along the production and gain the trust of ethical-minded consumers.

Learn more about our coffee and business philosophy.

Do you roast dark or light?

We roast our single origins using omni medium/light profiles. (This means you can use it for pour over and espresso brewing, no need to buy different bean bags with specific roast styles.)

We roast our espresso blends using darker profiles.

What is “specialty coffee”?

The definitions and references to specialty coffee are changing.

Historically, and as most people think of it these days, specialty coffee is Arabica beans that score over 80 in the old Specialty Coffee Association point scale. Today, the SCA refers to specialty coffee as “a coffee or coffee experience that is recognized for its distinctive attributes, resulting in a higher value within the marketplace.”

Can I subscribe?

Absolutely. Our coffee subscription lets you get your favourite beans (for filter and espresso, black or milk drinks) delivered regularly for free and with no lock-in periods.

With love, from Sample

We’re an independent coffee roasting company based in Gadigal land / Sydney, Australia

We’ve been sharing exceptional coffees since 2011, with a particular focus on rotating single origins, ethical sourcing, and homebrewing accessibility.

Our daily work is driven by quality, consistency, transparency, and fun. This approach has slowly and organically connected us with a community of homebrewers and professionals who value how we do business and, above all, love delicious coffee beyond the hype.

Learn about us

Roasting this week

Our current coffees