Brazil · Processing
Honey Process in Brazil
Honey Process (Pulped natural, semi-washed) is one of the processing methods that defines Brazilian coffee. With a harvest running may – september and production of ≈60–70 million 60-kg bags, Brazil's producers choose their processing methods around climate, water access, and the market position of regions like Sul de Minas and Cerrado Mineiro.
The method's practical profile matters at origin: water use is low — pulping only, no fermentation or wash water., drying takes 10–20 days; darker honey grades dry slower by design., and the key risks are mucilage attracts mold if drying stalls; clumping causes uneven moisture without frequent turning. Those constraints interact directly with Brazil's harvest-season weather and infrastructure — the reason the method took root here in the first place.
In the cup, honey process pushes Brazilian coffee toward rounder body and more sweetness than washed, cleaner than natural, layered over the origin's underlying character of milk chocolate, hazelnut, caramel, low bright acidity, round body — the world's blending backbone; specialty lots add red fruit, florals, and ferment-driven complexity. Comparing the same Brazilian coffee across processing methods is one of the clearest ways to taste what processing actually does.
Key facts
| Method | Honey Process (Pulped natural, semi-washed) |
|---|---|
| Flavor impact | Rounder body and more sweetness than washed, cleaner than natural; stone fruit, honey, and caramel notes are typical. |
| Water use | Low — pulping only, no fermentation or wash water. |
| Drying time | 10–20 days; darker honey grades dry slower by design. |
| Key risks | Mucilage attracts mold if drying stalls; clumping causes uneven moisture without frequent turning. |
| Brazil harvest | May – September |
| Brazil altitude | 800–1,400 m |
| Export gateways | Santos, Rio de Janeiro, Vitória |
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Honey Process in Brazil — frequently asked questions
Why do Brazilian producers use honey process?
It fits the origin's conditions: low — pulping only, no fermentation or wash water. water requirements and 10–20 days; darker honey grades dry slower by design. drying suit the may – september harvest window, and the method's cup results — rounder body and more sweetness than washed, cleaner than natural — match what buyers seek from Brazil.
How does honey process change the taste of Brazilian coffee?
It layers rounder body and more sweetness than washed, cleaner than natural over Brazil's base character of milk chocolate, hazelnut, caramel, low bright acidity, round body — the world's blending backbone; specialty lots add red fruit, florals, and ferment-driven complexity.
What are the risks of honey process in Brazil?
Mucilage attracts mold if drying stalls; clumping causes uneven moisture without frequent turning. Skilled stations manage these through cherry selection, monitoring, and drying discipline.
Volcana Coffee exports high-grown Catimor, Typica, and washed Fine Robusta from the Bolaven Plateau, Laos — washed, natural, and honey processed, SGS-inspected, with full export documentation. Cup our origin against any in the world.
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