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Why there’s much more to picking
Nespresso’s coffee cherries than you thought.
Harvesting coffee is either done by hand or machine, depending on a farm’s size and terrain. But it’s not as easy
as it may sound — coffee cherries on the same branch ripen at different times, which can make things tricky.
Want to know more? Below we reveal the curious ins and outs of harvesting.
01
It’s easy to tell when a coffee cherry is ripe and ready to be harvested – it’s bright red.
If it’s green, you’re
too early, and
if it’s black, you’ve waited too long. We train the farmers to ensure they always pick ripe
cherries.
02
Certain countries, such as Kenya, have two crops
(a main crop and a fly crop) so they have two harvests a year.
That means, more coffee. Lucky them; lucky us.
03
Farmers hand-harvest most of the cherries for our Grands Crus as they usually ripen at different rates on the
same branch. It takes three to five trips to pick them all from coffee trees, as so many have to be left to
mature.
It’s easy to tell when a coffee cherry is ripe and ready to be harvested – it’s bright red.
If it’s green, you’re too
early, and
if it’s black, you’ve waited too long.
04
“Stripping” is another method of harvesting. Pickers slide their hands along the branches and strip the trees
of both ripe and unripe cherries, which fall onto tarpaulin underneath the tree. The fruit is then
meticulously sorted in a machine or by hand as even a few unripe beans can affect the taste of the coffee.
05
In countries like Brazil, which have very large plantations and the land is flat, a machine is used for
harvesting. It’s driven over each tree and shakes the branches so the fruit falls off. The cherries are then
sorted in other machines which weed out the green ones.
06
Harvest time doesn’t necessarily mean amazing weather. In fact, you’ll need an umbrella in the Espírito Santo
region of Brazil’s subtropical north where it rains heavily in July, just when the Conilon we
use for our Kazaar
coffee ripens. As the farmers can’t dry the cherries in the sun, they
use a
machine
set to a low temperature
– and indirect heat – so as not to damage the beans.
It’s easy to tell when a coffee cherry is ripe and ready to be harvested – it’s bright red.
If it’s green, you’re too
early, and
if it’s black, you’ve waited too long.
An awful lot goes into harvesting our coffees — and quite right too. It’s one of the reasons we think they taste
so good.