benchmark - formative
CATURRA, WASHED + THERMAL SHOCK FINCA EL JARAGUAL, ANTIOQUIA, COLOMBIA
Mango Melt is a clean, refined Colombian coffee with layered sweetness, gentle acidity, and a polished, elegant finish.
A precise, modern expression of washed Caturra, it’s shaped by careful fermentation control and thoughtful processing at Finca El Jaragual in Antioquia. The cup is composed and well balanced, highlighting clarity and sweetness with soft fruit tones, a smooth, integrated mouthfeel, and a bright but controlled acidity.
This coffee performs beautifully across brew methods. As filter, it delivers clarity and definition, allowing subtle sweetness and structure to come through without distraction. Brewed as espresso, it produces a composed, articulate shot that remains sweet and refined.
The washed process, combined with yeast inoculation and thermal shock, enhances definition while preserving the varietal’s natural character, adding polish rather than dominance. We chose this coffee for its precision, balance, and the clear intention behind every stage of processing.
If you’re looking for a Colombian coffee that offers clarity, sweetness, and dependable consistency across brew styles, this one settles easily into regular rotation.
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V60
Coffee: 18g
Water: 310ml
Temperature: 92°C
Total Time: ~2:30-3:00
Grind Size: EK 8.5 / ~26-28 clicks on Commandate
Method
Rinse the paper filter, add 18g of coffee and gently level the bed
Bloom, add 50g of water
Swirl gently to ensure even saturation
Wait 30 seconds
Pour up to 150g total by ~1:00
Keep a steady, controlled pour
Pour up to 310g. Maintain a slow, consistent flow,
Let it drain completely (finish around 2:30–3:00)
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Origin: Antioquia, Colombia
Variety: Caturra
Process: Washed (Thermal Shock)
Farm: Finca El Jaragual
Roast: OmniMango Melt is a clean, refined Colombian coffee with layered sweetness, gentle acidity, and a polished, elegant finish.
A precise, modern expression of washed Caturra, it’s shaped by careful fermentation control and thoughtful processing at Finca El Jaragual in Antioquia. The cup is composed and well balanced, highlighting clarity and sweetness with soft fruit tones, a smooth, integrated mouthfeel, and a bright but controlled acidity.
This coffee performs beautifully across brew methods. As filter, it delivers clarity and definition, allowing subtle sweetness and structure to come through without distraction. Brewed as espresso, it produces a composed, articulate shot that remains sweet and refined.
The washed process, combined with yeast inoculation and thermal shock, enhances definition while preserving the varietal’s natural character, adding polish rather than dominance. We chose this coffee for its precision, balance, and the clear intention behind every stage of processing.
If you’re looking for a Colombian coffee that offers clarity, sweetness, and dependable consistency across brew styles, this one settles easily into regular rotation.
Producer
This coffee was grown by Jorge Mira at Finca El Jaragual, a 150-hectare farm located in Antioquia, Colombia, at an altitude of around 1,500 metres. Jorge Mira is widely recognised for his technical approach to coffee farming, combining a background in forestry with a deep focus on quality-driven coffee production.
At El Jaragual, coffee is grown alongside extensive forestry areas, creating a diverse and resilient ecosystem. The farm places strong emphasis on selective harvesting, sustainability, and precision at every stage of production. Caturra remains a key variety on the farm, valued for its balance, sweetness, and ability to clearly express processing and terroir when handled carefully.
For this lot, cherries are harvested at a minimum of 90% ripeness before undergoing flotation to remove defects. The coffee then passes through a carefully controlled post-harvest workflow: a 24-hour oxidation phase in food-grade drums, dry pulping, followed by a further 24-hour oxidation to break down mucilage. A hot wash at 45°C creates a thermal shock, preparing the coffee for a 48-hour fermentation with specific yeast strains at temperatures below 25°C. Once fermentation is complete, the coffee is washed again at 5°C to seal the process, then dried mechanically over 76 hours at controlled temperatures before stabilisation in GrainPro-style bags.
This meticulous approach results in a coffee that reflects both Jorge Mira’s technical expertise and his commitment to clarity and consistency. El Jaragual’s coffees are recognised for their polish, balance, and repeatability - qualities that have made the farm a reference point for modern Colombian production.
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TROPICAL FRUIT, MANGO, AND TOFFEE
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Roasting date : 13.04.2026
Freeze date : 19.04.2026
Curiosities
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Coffee was first brought to Colombia in the early 1700’s by Jesuit priests who arrived with Spanish settlers. The first crops were harvested in the Northeast part of the country, but coffee was quickly adopted across the nation by small, family farms as a local cash crop.
The first commercial export of coffee didn’t occur until the first decade of the 1800’s. That first shipment of a humble 100 bags of green coffee (around 60kg each) was the first of what would become a major industry. As coffee consumption grew rapidly in The United States, Germany, and France in the mid-1800’s, so did Colombia’s coffee production.
The growing industry hit a brief decline in the late 1800’s as a civil war broke out in the country, called The Thousand Days War. The fighting, along with a lull in international coffee prices, forced many plantation owners to split up farmland among workers, giving locals ownership and autonomy over their own farms.
In the early 1900’s, the now peaceful Colombia created a logistics system that enabled rural, small-estate farmers to export their coffee more efficiently. This spurred a new age of growth and gave those newer farmers a way to keep producing.
In 1927, the National Federation of Coffee Growers of Colombia was created to protect the interests of coffee growers. This organization quickly came to represent a large portion of Colombian coffee farmers.
Over the next few years, Colombia thrived as a coffee producer and became the world’s 3rd largest exporter, behind only Brazil and Vietnam.
In the 50’s the FNC launched an ad campaign that would create a national icon and generate a thirst for Colombian coffee around the globe. The man who made it happen was Juan Valdez, a fictional character who would appear on a variety of ads to communicate the quality of Colombian coffee.
Juan Valdez and his loyal donkey, Conchita, have been beloved ever since. Many have claimed that this character has become “the Uncle Sam of Colombia”, though we’re honestly not sure if that’s a correct assessment.
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The Antioquia region is one of Colombia’s largest and most historically important coffee-producing areas, located in the central northwest of the country within the northern Andes mountain range. Coffee farms are generally situated between 1,300 and 2,200 meters above sea level, where steep mountainous terrain, fertile volcanic and clay-rich soils, and a mild tropical climate create excellent conditions for coffee cultivation. Temperatures typically range between 17–24°C, with consistent rainfall and abundant cloud cover helping slow cherry maturation and preserve acidity.
Unlike some smaller micro-regions, Antioquia is extremely diverse in both landscape and production style. The department contains a wide range of microclimates due to its dramatic elevation changes, allowing producers to cultivate coffees with very different cup profiles depending on the municipality, altitude, and processing approach. Areas such as Urrao, Concordia, Ciudad Bolívar, Jardín, and Santa Bárbara have become particularly recognized for high-quality specialty production.
Historically, Antioquia played a central role in the expansion of Colombian coffee culture and remains one of the country’s highest-volume producing regions. While it has long been associated with classic washed Colombian profiles — balanced sweetness, caramel, chocolate, nuts, and red fruit — the region has increasingly shifted toward specialty-focused cultivation and experimental processing methods. Many producers now explore extended fermentations, naturals, honeys, thermal shock, and co-fermented coffees alongside traditional washed lots.
The combination of high elevations, cooler nighttime temperatures, and slower cherry development often results in coffees with structured sweetness, medium-to-high acidity, and dense, syrupy body. Depending on the specific micro-region and process, flavor profiles can range from traditional milk chocolate and panela notes to highly floral, tropical, winey, or intensely fruit-forward expressions.
Antioquia is also notable for its strong infrastructure, coffee cooperatives, and generational farming knowledge. Many farms are relatively small family-owned operations, though the region also contains larger estates and progressive producers investing heavily in varietal separation, precision fermentation, and sustainability initiatives. This balance between tradition and innovation has made Antioquia one of the most influential regions in modern Colombian specialty coffee.
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The Caturra variety is a natural mutation of Bourbon that was first discovered in Brazil in the early 20th century and later became one of the most influential coffee varieties across Latin America, especially in Colombia and Central America. Its name comes from the Guaraní word meaning “small,” referring to the plant’s compact dwarf stature. This shorter structure allows farmers to plant trees more densely and makes harvesting and maintenance more efficient compared to taller traditional Bourbon plants.
Caturra became widely adopted because it offered a balance between improved productivity and good cup quality. The variety responds particularly well to higher altitudes and careful farm management, where slower cherry maturation can enhance sweetness and acidity development. However, unlike modern hybrid varieties such as Castillo, Caturra is highly susceptible to coffee leaf rust and other diseases, which has reduced its popularity in some producing regions over the last decades.
In the cup, Caturra is known for producing clean, balanced, and expressive profiles with medium to bright acidity, good sweetness, and a relatively silky body. Depending on terroir and processing, it can show notes of citrus, red fruits, caramel, panela, chocolate, and floral characteristics. In high-altitude specialty contexts, especially with meticulous washed processing, Caturra can deliver exceptional clarity and elegance.
The variety is also extremely important genetically because it became the foundation for many modern breeding programs and hybrids throughout Latin America. Numerous cultivars including Castillo and Catuaí were developed using Caturra genetics due to its compact size and quality potential.
Although many producers have transitioned toward more disease-resistant cultivars, Caturra remains highly respected within specialty coffee because of its cup quality and transparency of terroir. When grown in ideal conditions and carefully processed, it is still capable of achieving very high specialty scores and highly refined sensory profiles.