- Ethiopia
- November - January
Ethiopia Guji Danbi Udo G2 Natural 2025
Guji Danbi Udo Wet Mill
The Danbi Udo station, owned by Hailu Abebe of Demand Trading PLC, has made a name for itself processing high-quality Ethiopian coffee from the the Guji Zone. Farmers handpick ripe red cherries, and the mill meticulously processes and sorts the coffee to protect quality before forwarding it to Addis Ababa for dry milling. Elevations range from 1,950–2,200 masl, contributing to dense green coffee beans ideal for coffee roasting.
Ethiopia's Guji Zone
Guji’s rich volcanic soils, forest canopy of shade trees, and ideal temperatures create a distinct coffee origin renowned for clarity and sweetness. Smallholders often intercrop coffee with avocados, mangoes, and legumes, and many apply organic inputs distributed through the local supply chain to maintain soil fertility and prevent erosion.
How is Ethiopian Coffee Graded
Ethiopia typically grades export lots by cup quality and physical preparation on a scale of 1 - 9, where Grades 1 and 2 are reserved for the best coffees. These coffees offer superior cup profiles, with only minimal defects. Grade 1 (G1) signals the highest level of preparation and sorting - an important benchmark for buyers of unroasted coffee seeking dependable quality from Ethiopian coffee origins.
Ethiopian Coffee Varieties
Farms supplying Danbi Udo grow a mix of regional landraces and JARC selections, including 74110, 74158, and 74112 alongside local varieties such as Badessa, Wolichu, and Kudhume. This genetic diversity, paired with altitude and microclimate, drives the highly nuanced flavors that roasters seek out when buying Ethiopian coffee.
Natural Processing
At Danbi Udo, natural (dry) processing begins with handpicked cherries that are sorted and then spread thinly on raised beds for sun-drying with frequent turning. Depending on climate, natural lots dry over approximately three to four weeks before hulling.
Ethiopian Coffee History
Ethiopia is widely regarded as coffee’s birthplace, with centuries of cultivation by smallholder farmers who steward heirloom genetics across regions like Sidama, Yirgacheffe, and Guji. Today, Ethiopia’s producer networks and community mills (like Danbi Udo) continue that legacy—linking farm-level craftsmanship to international buyers of green coffee beans and advancing quality through selective picking, careful processing, and traceable lots rooted in natural processing traditions.
GEOGRAPHY:
Region Guji Zone, Oromia, Danbi Udo
Altitude 1950-2200
PRODUCER:
Hailu Abebe, Danbi Udo Wet Mill, Various smallholders
VARIETY:
74110, 74158, 74112, Badessa, Wolichu, Kudhume
PROCESSING:
Natural
HARVEST TIME:
November - January