Photo of a bag of Nova Pb Photo of a bag of Nova Pb

Rwanda Nova Pb

Sorry, sold out!

Variety: Red Bourbon
Process: washed

Flavour: peach iced tea, mandarin

Body:   Acidity:

Roast: Omni (filter + espresso)

Producer: Agnes Mukamushinja

Region: Gicumbi, Northern Rwanda, Rwanda

Altitude: 1750m above sea level

This coffee comes from the Nova Coffee washing station in the Gicumbi district of Northern Rwanda.

The washing station was previously operated as part of a cooperative, but there was little invested in the washing station or the cooperative itself to increase quality and their capacity.

But Agnes Mukamushinja saw the potential of the washing station, and purchased it in 2013 with her husband, and renamed the washing station to be Nova Coffee.

View of Nova Coffee washing station

She’s driven investment in the operations at the wet mill with a new pulping machine, new fermentation tanks, sorting and floating areas, as well as new drying beds and a better warehouse for storing parchment.

There’s also been investment in the many smallholder farms in the surrounding community.

These farms are usually small, run by families with some coffee trees on small amounts of land, who take care of the trees and pick the cherries themselves.

Farmers can deliver their coffee cherry to whichever washing station they choose, and the competition for cherry can be pretty tough. Anges and her team at Nova work hard to build and maintain relationships with the farmers around their washing station, and offer competitive pricing. Their investment in surrounding farms and the community also helps to establish good relationships.

Nova also provides medical insurance (Mituelle de Sante) to fifty households, and hosts football and cycling competitions for the community. They also reward the farmers who have supplied the best quality and best sorted crops each season.

You can read some pretty incredible testimonials from workers and farmers on their website.

What happens at the washing station?

Farmers deliver their cherry at the reception area of the washing station, where it will be checked to make sure the farmer has picked and sorted correctly. In cases where further sorting is required, the farmer will be asked to do so, then it’s weighed and moves on to pulping.

The cherry are placed in a tank prior to pulping where ‘floaters’ are removed, using simple technique: over-ripe and undeveloped cherries rise to the surface of the tank, ripe and green ones are dense and sink. The unripe or over-ripe are processed separately, and sold as as lower grade coffee.

From here the coffee is pulped and then fermented. Rwanda’s climate through most of the harvest season is relatively cool, which helps in controlling the fermentation process. After this the parchment is graded and washed in channels, it is separated into two grades based on density before being soaked under clean water in tanks for up to 16 hours.

The parchment is initially taken to shaded pre-drying tables, and while the parchment is still wet another round of sorting is done by hand as it is much easier to spot defects at this point. The parchment is dried on African drying beds for up to 15 days, and covered by shade cloth during Rwanda’s intense midday sun, or to protect it from moisture during any rain and at night.

Once dried, it’s packed in bags and shipped for export.

What’s with the PB?

If you take a closer look at these beans, you’ll notice something unusual: the beans are a little smaller and more rounded in shape compared to the usual half-sphere. This unusual bean shape is called a Peaberry, often shortened to PB.

Comparing a peaberry bean with a typical bean (in this case, Ethiopian Heirloom)

Normally a coffee bean splits in two during development giving it the typical shape, but up to ten percent of crops can develop as peaberries.

Other than in Kenya, peaberries are not traditionally picked out when processing and traded as a separate lot, but it sometimes happens when there’s an exceptionally great harvest.

The last time we shared a peaberry was a year ago: Nyamasheke PB, from Rwanda’s Western Province.

Most Rwandan farmers plant subsistance crops, with only ten percent of farmers growing coffee – but it’s already become a significant crop for trade, generating up around 40% of all export revenue.

Rwandan coffee

Nova also works with the Rwanda Trading Company to increase efficiency and quality.

The Rwandan Trading Company owns and manages a small number of washing stations in Rwanda, and also works with many other washing stations and independent farmers throughout the country to help improve production, quality control and market their coffees. RTC was established in 2009 as a vehicle for social impact and offers financial literacy, agribusiness management and agronomy training programs to its partners to increase yield and keep them operational, profitable and healthy.

Read more about the role of coffee in empowering people in Rwanda.

Washed process coffee

Explanation here.

Red Bourbon variety

100% Red Bourbon coffee beans, provided by Silo/Nordic Approach 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

This coffee comes from the Nova Coffee washing station in the Gicumbi district of Northern Rwanda.

The washing station was previously operated as part of a cooperative, but there was little invested in the washing station or the cooperative itself to increase quality and their capacity.

But Agnes Mukamushinja saw the potential of the washing station, and purchased it in 2013 with her husband, and renamed the washing station to be Nova Coffee.

View of Nova Coffee washing station

She’s driven investment in the operations at the wet mill with a new pulping machine, new fermentation tanks, sorting and floating areas, as well as new drying beds and a better warehouse for storing parchment.

There’s also been investment in the many smallholder farms in the surrounding community.

These farms are usually small, run by families with some coffee trees on small amounts of land, who take care of the trees and pick the cherries themselves.

Farmers can deliver their coffee cherry to whichever washing station they choose, and the competition for cherry can be pretty tough. Anges and her team at Nova work hard to build and maintain relationships with the farmers around their washing station, and offer competitive pricing. Their investment in surrounding farms and the community also helps to establish good relationships.

Nova also provides medical insurance (Mituelle de Sante) to fifty households, and hosts football and cycling competitions for the community. They also reward the farmers who have supplied the best quality and best sorted crops each season.

You can read some pretty incredible testimonials from workers and farmers on their website.

What happens at the washing station?

Farmers deliver their cherry at the reception area of the washing station, where it will be checked to make sure the farmer has picked and sorted correctly. In cases where further sorting is required, the farmer will be asked to do so, then it’s weighed and moves on to pulping.

The cherry are placed in a tank prior to pulping where ‘floaters’ are removed, using simple technique: over-ripe and undeveloped cherries rise to the surface of the tank, ripe and green ones are dense and sink. The unripe or over-ripe are processed separately, and sold as as lower grade coffee.

From here the coffee is pulped and then fermented. Rwanda’s climate through most of the harvest season is relatively cool, which helps in controlling the fermentation process. After this the parchment is graded and washed in channels, it is separated into two grades based on density before being soaked under clean water in tanks for up to 16 hours.

The parchment is initially taken to shaded pre-drying tables, and while the parchment is still wet another round of sorting is done by hand as it is much easier to spot defects at this point. The parchment is dried on African drying beds for up to 15 days, and covered by shade cloth during Rwanda’s intense midday sun, or to protect it from moisture during any rain and at night.

Once dried, it’s packed in bags and shipped for export.

What’s with the PB?

If you take a closer look at these beans, you’ll notice something unusual: the beans are a little smaller and more rounded in shape compared to the usual half-sphere. This unusual bean shape is called a Peaberry, often shortened to PB.

Comparing a peaberry bean with a typical bean (in this case, Ethiopian Heirloom)

Normally a coffee bean splits in two during development giving it the typical shape, but up to ten percent of crops can develop as peaberries.

Other than in Kenya, peaberries are not traditionally picked out when processing and traded as a separate lot, but it sometimes happens when there’s an exceptionally great harvest.

The last time we shared a peaberry was a year ago: Nyamasheke PB, from Rwanda’s Western Province.

Most Rwandan farmers plant subsistance crops, with only ten percent of farmers growing coffee – but it’s already become a significant crop for trade, generating up around 40% of all export revenue.

Rwandan coffee

Nova also works with the Rwanda Trading Company to increase efficiency and quality.

The Rwandan Trading Company owns and manages a small number of washing stations in Rwanda, and also works with many other washing stations and independent farmers throughout the country to help improve production, quality control and market their coffees. RTC was established in 2009 as a vehicle for social impact and offers financial literacy, agribusiness management and agronomy training programs to its partners to increase yield and keep them operational, profitable and healthy.

Read more about the role of coffee in empowering people in Rwanda.

Region

Gicumbi, Northern Rwanda

Altitude

1750m above sea level

Producer

Agnes Mukamushinja

Roast style

Omni (filter + espresso)

Map showing location of Rwanda Nova Pb

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

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