- Kenya
- October - December
Kenya PB Menu Factory 2025
Kenya Peaberry Menu
On the steep southern slopes of Mt. Elgon, at 1,800 to 1,900 masl, Menu Factory members farm coffee, maize, beans, finger millet, and sweet potatoes. Agriculture is their backbone, and families here rely on crop production as both a food source and income. In addition to producing coffee for Menu Factory, farmers diversify their economic activity with dairy farming, equipped with a cooling plant and biogas installation.
Kenyan Green Coffee Beans
Kenyan green coffee beans are renowned for their bold, fruit-forward flavors and complex acidity. This coffee is grown in rich volcanic soil, slowly ripening at high altitudes in cool temperatures. The dominant varieties here are SL-28, SL-34, Ruiru 11, and Batian.
Among Kenya’s most celebrated varieties are SL-28 and SL-34, developed by Scott Agricultural Laboratories (hence, SL) in the 1930s for their drought resistance, exceptional cup quality, and high yield at elevated altitudes. Following a coffee berry disease (CBD) epidemic in 1968, the CBD-resistant Ruiru 11 varietal was introduced and quickly adopted nationwide. In 2010, the Coffee Research Institute (CRI) developed Batian, another resistant variety prized for its tall, hardy growth and ease of management by smallholders.
How Is Coffee Graded in Kenya?
Green coffee from Kenya is graded by screen size. The grades range from E (Elephant Bean), PB (Peaberry), AA, AB, C, TT, T, and MH/ML, totaling eight grades. Kenyan peaberry coffee, where only a single coffee bean grows inside a cherry instead of the typical twin beans, is highly sought-after. Because only one bean matures, the peaberry usually develops with more sugars and nutrients than twin beans that share a cherry. That’s also why peaberries are rounder and denser than most coffee beans.
When Is Kenya’s Coffee Harvest Season?
Kenya’s main coffee harvest season is between October and December, meaning new crop coffees start shipping around February and March. Kenya also has a fly crop with a smaller yield from April to July.
Washed Kenyan Coffee Beans
Coffee harvesting and processing in Kenya begins with careful monitoring of cherry ripeness, ensuring only fully red cherries are handpicked in the early morning and transported to the wet mill. In the afternoon, harvested cherries are spread out on a patio, where underripes, overripes, and foreign objects are sorted out before being funneled into the pulping station.
Clean water helps move the cherries through the pulping house, where their outer fruit is removed, and the beans are separated by density. Floating beans are skimmed off while denser beans move into fermentation tanks overnight. The next day, the wet mill manager assesses whether the sticky mucilage has broken down enough before washing the beans thoroughly.
Once cleaned, the beans flow into washing channels, where wooden shunts separate the denser, higher-quality beans from the lighter ones. Finally, the beans are carefully sun-dried on raised tables under strict supervision, covered and turned when necessary, and monitored until they reach the ideal 10-12% moisture content before being bagged for transport to the dry mill.
Kenya Green Coffee Beans
Kenya and Ethiopia may share a border, but their coffee industries have followed vastly different paths since the beginning. While coffee is native to Ethiopia, it wasn’t introduced to Kenya until 1893, when French missionaries planted the first trees in the Taita Hills.
For over a century, Kenya’s coffee could only be traded through a government-run auction system—one of the world's most transparent, designed to reward quality with higher prices. This system cemented Kenya’s reputation for consistently producing quality coffee. Since 2006, new legislation has allowed direct trade between farmers and international buyers.
Although Kenya’s coffee production declined in 2023/2024 due to disruptions from government reforms and the adoption of a new payment system, the outlook for this season is promising as operations stabilize and the industry adapts. Read more in our Kenya Origin Report.
GEOGRAPHY:
Region Bungoma County
Altitude 1800-1900
PRODUCER:
Menu Farmers' Cooperative Society, Menu Factory
VARIETY:
SL 34 , SL 28, Ruiru 11, Batian
PROCESSING:
Washed
HARVEST TIME:
October - December