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Kenya: Thiririka AB

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Regular price 265 kr
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In your cup: Elegance, structure and complexity from these beans that offer a classic Kenyan flavour profile, bringing to end juicy blackcurrant, tart rhubarb and sweet plums  

Cupping score: 88,7

Mouthfeel: Elegant

Varietals: SL28, SL34, Batian, Ruiru 11

Process: Fully washed

Producer: Thiririki Farmers Cooperative Society

Altitude: 1600 - 1800 m.a.s.l.

Region: Kiambu

Background:  

This vibrant Kenyan coffee comes to us from the Thiririka Farmers Cooperative Society, where hundreds of dedicated smallholder farmers work together to produce coffees celebrated for their clarity, structure, and remarkable sweetness. Grown in the fertile clay loam soils of Kiambu County, just outside Nairobi, the coffee is cultivated mainly by farmers tending small plots of land, often alongside dairy farming and other crops.

At Thiririka’s three factories — Githembe, Kiganjo, and Ndundu — quality is shaped through careful attention at every stage. Cherries are hand-sorted before pulping, then dry fermented, washed, density graded, soaked, and finally dried slowly on raised beds. This meticulous process highlights the elegant character Kenya is famous for.

In the cup, expect a coffee that feels both delicate and intense. Juicy blackcurrant and tart rhubarb lead the way, followed by a pie-like sweetness and layers of plum jam. Open floral notes bring lift and elegance, while the structure remains refined and beautifully balanced throughout.

Thiririka has built a strong reputation among specialty coffee buyers thanks to its consistency and collaborative approach to quality. Farmers receive ongoing training in agricultural best practices, and many use organic fertilization methods, relying on cow manure rather than agrochemicals. Despite challenges facing coffee producers in the region — from rising production costs to pressure from urban development around Nairobi — the cooperative continues to invest in both quality and farmer support.

Kenya’s transparent coffee system rewards excellence, and societies like Thiririka are able to return a significant share of the final coffee price back to farmers. It’s a model that encourages continuous improvement — and one that shines clearly in every cup of this exceptional lot.