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Costa Rica · Processing

Washed Process in Costa Rica

Washed Process (Wet process, fully washed) is one of the processing methods that defines Costa Rican coffee. With a harvest running november – march and production of ≈1.3 million 60-kg bags, Costa Rica's producers choose their processing methods around climate, water access, and the market position of regions like Tarrazú and West Valley.

The method's practical profile matters at origin: water use is high — traditionally 10–20 l per kg of cherry; modern eco-pulpers cut this by 80% or more., drying takes 6–12 days on raised beds depending on weather., and the key risks are over-fermentation (vinegar/onion taints), uneven washing, and water contamination if effluent is not managed. Those constraints interact directly with Costa Rica's harvest-season weather and infrastructure — the reason the method took root here in the first place.

In the cup, washed process pushes Costa Rican coffee toward clean, articulate cups with bright acidity and clear varietal character, layered over the origin's underlying character of bright, clean, honeyed sweetness; orange and red-apple acidity, silky body. Comparing the same Costa Rican coffee across processing methods is one of the clearest ways to taste what processing actually does.

Key facts

MethodWashed Process (Wet process, fully washed)
Flavor impactClean, articulate cups with bright acidity and clear varietal character; body is typically lighter than natural-processed equivalents.
Water useHigh — traditionally 10–20 L per kg of cherry; modern eco-pulpers cut this by 80% or more.
Drying time6–12 days on raised beds depending on weather.
Key risksOver-fermentation (vinegar/onion taints), uneven washing, and water contamination if effluent is not managed.
Costa Rica harvestNovember – March
Costa Rica altitude1,200–1,900 m
Export gatewaysPuerto Caldera (Pacific), Moín/Limón (Atlantic)

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Washed Process in Costa Rica — frequently asked questions

Why do Costa Rican producers use washed process?

It fits the origin's conditions: high — traditionally 10–20 l per kg of cherry; modern eco-pulpers cut this by 80% or more. water requirements and 6–12 days on raised beds depending on weather. drying suit the november – march harvest window, and the method's cup results — clean, articulate cups with bright acidity and clear varietal character — match what buyers seek from Costa Rica.

How does washed process change the taste of Costa Rican coffee?

It layers clean, articulate cups with bright acidity and clear varietal character over Costa Rica's base character of bright, clean, honeyed sweetness; orange and red-apple acidity, silky body.

What are the risks of washed process in Costa Rica?

Over-fermentation (vinegar/onion taints), uneven washing, and water contamination if effluent is not managed. 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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