COFFEE GRADE: GAYO GRD.1
FARM/COOP/STATION: Ribang Gayo Musara Cooperative
VARIETAL: Abyssinia, Ateng, Gayo 1, Gayo 2, Timtim
PROCESSING: Natural
ALTITUDE: 1,500 to 1,700 meters above sea level
OWNER: Asman Arianto & 350+ farmers delivering to Ribang Gayo Musara Cooperative
SUBREGION/TOWN: Pantan Musara, Aceh Tengah
REGION: Sumatra
FARM SIZE: 0.5 to 2.5 hectares on average
AREA UNDER COFFEE: 0.5 to 2.5 hectares on average
BAG SIZE: 60kg GrainPro
HARVEST MONTHS: Sumatra: April-June (main crop) & Nov-Jan; year-round (fly crop)| Java: April - August | Bali: April - July | Flores: May - September | Sulawesi: May - October | Papua: May - October
COFFEE GRADE: GAYO GRD.1
FARM/COOP/STATION: Ribang Gayo Musara Cooperative
VARIETAL: Abyssinia, Ateng, Gayo 1, Gayo 2, Timtim
PROCESSING: Natural
ALTITUDE: 1,500 to 1,700 meters above sea level
OWNER: Asman Arianto & 350+ farmers delivering to Ribang Gayo Musara Cooperative
SUBREGION/TOWN: Pantan Musara, Aceh Tengah
REGION: Sumatra
FARM SIZE: 0.5 to 2.5 hectares on average
AREA UNDER COFFEE: 0.5 to 2.5 hectares on average
BAG SIZE: 60kg GrainPro
HARVEST MONTHS: Sumatra: April-June (main crop) & Nov-Jan; year-round (fly crop)| Java: April - August | Bali: April - July | Flores: May - September | Sulawesi: May - October | Papua: May - October
Asman Arianto is originally from Palembang, South Sumatra but has been living and working in Aceh Tengah since 1998. Most of the farmers in Aceh Tengah are migrants. Many of them were evacuated from Sinabung Berastagi in North Sumatra after the long-dormant volcano became continuously active again in 2013.
Asman sold various items during the time he lived in Palembang, but he was interested in coffee production. When he arrived in Aceh, Asman entered the coffee industry and began collecting and processing wet-hulled coffee. He soon switched to collecting cherry and processing as Fully washed, Honey or Natural.
He decided he wanted to build a cooperative to unite coffee farmers. In 2018, Asman formed the Ribang Gayo Musara Cooperative. His goal is to offer competitive prices that can help farmers reinvest in their farms and their families. The cooperative currently has over 350 members who deliver cherry to their processing facility in Pantan Musara.
The benefits for cooperative members are threefold. First, they get higher prices for their cherry when they sell to the cooperative. Second, as cooperative members, they receive end-of-season ‘second payment’ premiums that share a portion of profits earned for higher-quality lots. In 2019, that premium was 500 Rupiah per kilogram. Finally, the cooperative provides training and outreach for farmers in everything from cultivation to processing.
Almost all farms on Sumatra are small. On average, farms are between 0.5 to 2.5 hectares. Coffee is usually the primary cash crop for farmers, but most also intercrop their trees alongside vegetables, maize and fruit. This intercropped produce will make up a substantial part of the family’s diet for the year.
In addition to growing coffee as a cash crop, many smallholder farmers also work as hired laborers at the nearby tea plantations. Tea is also a huge crop in the area. The bigger tea plantations are often near coffee farms. When the harvest is finished, coffee farmers will go there and pick leaves under contracted labor.
Ribang Gayo Musara is profiting and expanding. Members doubled production yields in just 5 seasons (2016 to 2020). A newly completed cooperative wetmill will be available for use in the 2020 harvest. While Indonesia is known for its unique ‘Wet Hulled’ Process (Giling Basah), Asman and his team are expanding Indonesia’s coffee possibilities by diversifying the cooperative's processing methods.
Cherry is handpicked on member farms. Upon delivery to the cooperative wet mill, the cherry undergoes a rigorous selection process before being laid on raised drying beds covered with drying domes.
This lot was the happy result of extreme weather. It cupped so well, we were so excited about the result! Rain and humidity during drying led to extended drying times creating a fruity and delicious Natural whose profile is somewhere between an Anaerobic and traditional Natural. Drying time was about 50% more than typical drying times with cycles of higher ambient moisture, creating a more intense and winey character.
More about Ribang Gayo Musara
Want to learn more? Have a look at our recent interview with Asman.
Indonesia has a long coffee producing history, but recently their coffees have been overlooked by the specialty market. Thanks to our innovative and everexpanding supply chain, we are proud to bring you high-quality coffees from many of Indonesia’s unique regions, accompanied by in-depth traceability information.
Indonesia is perhaps best known for its unique wet hulling process (giling basah). Though its exact origins are unclear, wet hulling most likely originated in Aceh during the late 1970s.
Wet hulling’s popularity can be attributed to producers’ need for prompt payments. It was also adopted specifically by many producers who lacked the drying infrastructure that was needed to shelter drying parchment from the high humidity and inconsistent rainfall typical in Sumatra. At higher elevations with constant humidity and unpredictable rainfall, drying can prove to be slow, risky and difficult.
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