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Ecuador | Loja | Single Origin | 100% Arabica

Ecuador | Loja | Single Origin | 100% Arabica

Medium Roast

Coming soon

From the highlands of Loja, Ecuador (1,800–2,000 masl) comes this single-origin, single-variety Typica honey-processed coffee. With its large, well-sorted beans and exceptional care in selection, this coffee delivers a cup that is both elegant and vibrant.

Expect very high sweetness and acidity, with flavor notes of sugarcane, honey, and ripe fruits, finishing with a clean, lingering aftertaste. Scoring 85 points (SCA), this coffee is perfect for roasters seeking a balanced, high-quality Arabica that shines both as espresso and filter.

Cup Profile

sugarcane, honey, fruity flavors

Processing Details

What is Honey Fermentation?

Honey processing is a method that sits between washed (fully washed) and natural (dry) coffee.

Harvesting: Ripe coffee cherries are hand-picked.

Pulping: The outer skin of the cherry is removed, but some of the sticky mucilage (the “honey layer”) around the bean is left intact.

Fermentation: The beans, still coated in mucilage, are fermented for a controlled period (hours to a couple of days). During this, natural yeasts and bacteria break down sugars, adding complexity to flavor.

Drying: The beans are then dried on patios or raised beds with the mucilage still on, absorbing sweetness and fruitiness into the seed before milling. Unlike washed coffees, honey-processed beans use less water, making the method more environmentally sustainable.

Why it’s called “Honey”

There is no actual honey used. The name comes from the sticky, golden mucilage layer that coats the beans during drying.This layer is rich in sugars, which contributes to the sweet, syrupy character in the final cup.

Flavor Impact

- Sweetness: Much higher compared to washed. Think honey, sugarcane, ripe fruit.
- Acidity: Usually bright and fruity, but softer than naturals.
- Body: Medium to full, often syrupy.
- Cup Character: Clean, balanced, with both clarity and fruit depth.

Honey Process “Levels”

- Yellow Honey: Small amount of mucilage left → cleaner, lighter cup.
- Red Honey: More mucilage left, longer fermentation → fruitier, more complex.
- Black Honey: Most mucilage left, slowest drying → very intense, winey, syrupy.

Shipping & Returns

We strive to process and ship all orders in a timely manner, working diligently to ensure that your coffee is on its way to you as soon as possible.

At Lore & Roast, all our coffees are roasted in small, intentional batches only after we receive your order. This means we roast fresh to order, not in advance. Please allow 1–2 days for roasting and processing.

Additionally, coffee needs a short resting (degassing) period of 24–48 hours after roasting to allow the flavors to fully develop before it is packed and shipped. This resting time is essential to ensure you receive coffee at its optimal flavor. Kindly factor this into the delivery timeline when placing your order.

As coffee is a perishable food product, we do not accept returns or exchanges once the item has been shipped. However, we are committed to ensuring a positive experience for all our customers. If you encounter any issues with your order, we invite you to reach out to our team for assistance. We evaluate every request with care and consideration.

Sustainably Sourced

Imported from Origin

100% Recyclable

Freshly Roasted

1,800–2,000 MASL

Altitude

Honey fermentation

Processing

Typica

Variety

Medium

Roast

Ecuador

Location

The story

The Lore Behind the Lot

From the lush highlands of Loja, Ecuador, this lot of single-origin Typica represents the elegance of Ecuador’s emerging specialty scene. Grown at 1,800–2,000 meters, where cool mountain air meets fertile Andean soils, the region offers the perfect conditions for cultivating Typica, one of the world’s most traditional Arabica varieties.

Generations of smallholder farmers here have dedicated themselves to producing coffee with care and precision. Cherries are hand-picked at peak ripeness and undergo a meticulous honey fermentation process, before being slowly dried under the Ecuadorian sun. This labor-intensive method enhances the bean’s natural sugars, unlocking a cup profile that is both bright and fruity, with notes of sugarcane, honey, and ripe fruit, and a clean, lingering aftertaste.

Selective harvesting, careful drying, and final machine-sorting ensure only the highest-quality beans are exported. For the farming families of Loja, coffee is more than a livelihood — it is a matter of pride, showcasing Ecuador as a rising star in the specialty coffee world.

Learn more about Ecuador coffees

Globally Sourced, Freshly Roasted Coffees

Behind the Beans

Why Does a Coffee’s Story Matter?

The story of coffee is a story of people all over the globe working incredibly hard to create this beverage we love so much. The story of a specific coffee - how it was grown and how the people involved in farming and transporting it were treated and compensated - is deeply ethical and inextricably tied to the coffee’s quality. Farmers can’t justify the cost, time, and labor required to make the high quality coffee if they’re not compensated adequately for such a difficult undertaking. We take the stories of our coffees seriously out of concern for people and our love of coffee.

We specifically choose coffees and import partners based on quality and ethics. A wide range of ethical claims intended to offer quick peace of mind exist throughout the coffee industry, but we’ve found that the size and complexity of the supply chain don’t really fit into such convenient labels. Our approach is to work with farming and importing partners whose standards are oriented towards improving farmer well being through financial traceability, ever improving coffee quality, and sustainability.

Why Our Coffee Costs What It Does?

At Lore & Roast, our pricing reflects the quality, care, and authenticity behind every cup. We source premium-grade beans from places like Ethiopia, Colombia, Thailand, Vietnam and beyond — regions that have been perfecting their coffee for generations and produce globally celebrated coffees with distinct profiles not grown in India. Each origin has its own personality, its own story, and honestly, its own magic.

To protect local coffee farmers, India imposes a 100%+ import duty on green beans. We fully support these protections and source responsibly, in small batches, to complement rather than compete with domestic production. But it does mean that getting these high-grade beans here is not exactly budget-friendly.

Despite these duties and logistical challenges, we choose to roast locally,  not import pre-roasted beans so we can deliver world-class freshness and flavor to Indian consumers. Coffee starts losing its character the moment it's roasted, so we want to control that process and get it to you as fresh as possible. Our goal isn’t just to offer better coffee, but to elevate the market standard for what coffee can be.

We are not trying to be coffee for everyone, we are coffee for people who have had that ‘wow’ moment when they taste something truly great and realize there's no going back. This is coffee for people who know the difference  and are willing to pay for it.

 

Why Roast matters?

Coffee is as complex as wine. It has the potential to have a wide array of flavors and aromas, varying levels of sweetness and acidity, and can possess body and flavors unique to the region and soil in which it was grown. These incredible characteristics can be destroyed by roasting or accentuated by it. We take account of many factors to roast each of our coffees with a tailored roast profile in order to develop this dynamic character in a way that creates a balanced yet interesting cup.

Washed, Natural - What Does Processing Mean?

Washed coffee doesn’t mean the beans are scrubbed like vegetables (haha, at least not quite!).

Dry processing, sometimes referred to as "dry washing," is one method of handling harvested coffee cherries. In this method, cherries are simply spread out in the courtyards of farms and left to dry naturally under the sun. This is the original processing style developed in Ethiopia and now widely used in Brazil as well.

In contrast, wet (or washed) processing involves peeling the fruit from the beans on the day of harvest. The beans are then placed in large cement fermentation tanks, where they rest for 12 to 24 hours (and in some cases, up to 2 to 3 days). During this time, naturally occurring bacteria begin to break down the sticky mucilage left on the beans after depulping.

Once fermentation is complete, the beans are rinsed to remove the remaining slime, often using a system of washing channels, before being dried.

That said, fermentation does occur in the dry method as well. It just happens naturally as the cherries dry in the sun, without being soaked in water or placed in tanks. Both methods involve fermentation, but the approach and process are quite different.

Coffee starts as the seed of a small cherry-like fruit. Before it can be roasted coffee has to be processed - the skin and flesh of the fruit need to be fully removed and the seed dried. There are several ways that this can be accomplished. Two of the most common are “washed” and “natural” processing. Washed process coffee tends to have a more mild character because the skin and fruit are washed off of the seed before it is dried. Natural processed coffee tends to have a more wild and often very fruity flavor because the fruit is left on the seed for part of the drying process and some amount of natural fermentation occurs. We get excited about both washed and natural coffees. Have you tried both?

How Elevation Affects Taste?

The elevation at which a coffee is grown doesn’t inherently make a coffee good or bad, though it can be used as an indicator of what quality to expect. At very high elevations, the coffee cherry is able to mature more slowly and a denser seed can develop. The density of the seed is important to us because a denser seed allows us to roast a more complex coffee. Along with the density, the elevation of coffee impacts its levels of sweetness and acidity and the flavor profile in general.

The information on altitude is just about the only statistically accurate indicator used in the entire coffee industry. There is very little room for mathematical parameters in the segment where taste is the main criterion of evaluation. Arabica coffee grows in altitudes higher than that of robustas and the greater the altitude of growing coffee, the more acidic it is in its flavor profile. This is why Arabica beans have an order of magnitude more pronounced acidity.

What Is The Role Of Fermentation In Coffee Processing?

Anyone might think roasting is the most important stage in a coffee bean’s journey, but it’s more accurate to say that if roasting marks the transition into maturity, then fermentation is the adolescent phase.

Fermentation, in simple terms, is the conversion of sugars and starches into alcohol and carbon dioxide by microorganisms, in the absence of air and with the help of enzymes. This process releases energy and initiates the breakdown of sugars in the coffee beans, allowing flavors to develop more clearly and distinctly.

Some believe that the fermentation stage in coffee processing is inspired by similar techniques used in cocoa processing. Whether or not that’s true, fermentation remains an essential part of coffee treatment today, contributing significantly to the final cup’s character and complexity.

How Is The Size Of Coffee Beans Related To Taste?

If you have two batches of roasted coffee beans - one with larger beans and the other with smaller ones, but both from the same parent variety, there should be no significant difference in taste purely due to size. In practice, bean size is more relevant for roasters than for consumers.

Larger beans offer a greater surface area, which allows for more even heat distribution during roasting. This makes them easier to roast consistently, which is why roasters often prefer them. As a result, larger beans tend to be in higher demand and naturally fetch a higher price.

However, the common belief that larger beans taste better is a misconception. This artificial link between size and flavor is more of a marketing tactic than a scientific truth. Visually, consumers are more inclined to choose bigger beans, which gives them a strong edge on the shelf—but not necessarily in the cup.

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