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Honey, cocoa, nutty, overall sweet, earthy finish.

DARK ROAST

Origin:  Vietnam

Region: Dak Lak Province

Estate: Various

Producers: Phuc Minh Trading Co

Varietal: Robusta

Altitude: 1000 masl

Grade: Scr 18

Processing: Wet Polished

Vietnam Daklak - Wet Polished Robusta

£8.00Price
  • Vietnam is the second largest producer of coffee in the world today, and the leading producer of Robusta coffee beans in the world.

    When Vietnam was known as French Indochina, coffee was an import with European ties, first brought to Vietnam in the mid-1800s. Initially unpopular among Vietnamese people, coffee became a growing part of Vietnamese culture much like bread, pastries, and other French imports.

    As people discovered that areas of Vietnam were conducive to coffee production, the trade proliferated. By the mid-1900s, most of the production was clustered in the Central Highlands of Vietnam where over 80% of the coffee continues to be grown to this day, namely Robusta. Robusta coffee was easier to cultivate and thanks to the red basalt soil of the Central Highlands, Vietnamese Robusta coffee has a distinctive taste unlike other coffee grown around the world.

    Many of the coffee growers in the Central Highlands continued to grow coffee after the French exited, but not without issue. As the Vietnamese government began to converge on market goods, coffee was regulated, which created a vacuum for the crop. When Vietnam gained its independence from the French, the post-war economy made coffee a luxury commodity only available to the affluent. Smuggling of coffee was extremely common, and thus exacerbated the market conditions of coffee.

    When the Đi Mi Reforms began in 1986, coffee production in Vietnam boomed but in a race for profit, many farmers were not encouraged to improve the quality of their coffee, resulting in a bad reputation for Robusta as cheap, rough, and bad. During these times, many farmers struggled to make ends meet and often filled their coffee sacks with other materials such as corn, twigs, or even dirt.

    The social reforms in the government allowed for market diversification and allowed farmers to grow coffee for various markets at different prices, but this only took hold as companies began to focus on quality control and exports to Western countries.

    While coffee in Vietnam has been considered exceptional by national experts, the international community continued to scorned its products due to outdated preconceptions despite growing advancements in the Vietnamese coffee industry. But as time progressed, many of the local farmers who specialized in growing high quality Robusta coffee were overshadowed by their large-scale, commercial competitors.

    Today, Vietnamese Robusta coffee remains a mixed market with over 90% of all coffee produced in Vietnam being exported. However, the growing trend of specialty coffee in Vietnam has allowed for the development of high-quality Robusta coffee enjoyed both domestically and internationally.

    While much of the coffee remains produced for commercial blends, an increasing number of farmers in Vietnam are converting their production to prioritize specialty Robusta coffee as demand for it grows. With these changes, farmers are able to improve their own livelihoods, maintain their lands through better growing practices, and position the mighty Vietnamese Robusta coffee bean as a coveted commodity for the future.

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