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Guatemala · Variety

Pacamara Coffee from Guatemala

Pacamara is one of the defining varieties of Guatemalan coffee. Guatemala grows coffee at 1,300–2,000 m across regions such as Antigua, Huehuetenango, Atitlán, and Pacamara — a Arabica of Pacas × Maragogipe cross, bred in El Salvador (released 1958) — occupies an important place in that landscape. Its preferred range of 1,200–1,900 m aligns with what Guatemalan farms can offer, which is a large part of why the pairing works.

Agronomically, Pacamara brings a demanding but rewarding profile — susceptible to rust — with moderate yields on a compact (from pacas), huge leaves and fruit plant. In Guatemala, where the harvest runs december – march and annual production is ≈3.4 million 60-kg bags, those traits shape which farms plant it and how its lots reach the export market through Puerto Quetzal (Pacific).

In the cup, Guatemalan Pacamara expresses both sides of its parentage: the variety contributes butterscotch, chocolate, bright citrus, distinctive herbal-savory undertone, while Guatemala's terroir adds the character the origin is known for — chocolate, spice, apple and stone-fruit acidity, full body. Buyers comparing Pacamara across origins will find the Guatemalan expression distinct for exactly that reason.

Key facts

VarietyPacamara
SpeciesArabica
LineagePacas × Maragogipe cross, bred in El Salvador (released 1958)
Optimal altitude1,200–1,900 m
Guatemala growing altitude1,300–2,000 m
Harvest seasonDecember – March
Disease resistanceSusceptible to rust
Bean sizeVery large (screen 19–20 common)
Typical Guatemalan cupChocolate, spice, apple and stone-fruit acidity, full body. Antigua: cocoa-smoke elegance; Huehuetenango: bright wine-citrus intensity; Cobán: soft spice and cream.

Related Guatemala regions

Pacamara Coffee from Guatemala — frequently asked questions

Where in Guatemala is Pacamara grown?

Primarily across Antigua, Huehuetenango, Atitlán, at elevations of 1,300–2,000 m. The variety's preferred range of 1,200–1,900 m means the higher zones tend to produce the most expressive lots.

What does Guatemalan Pacamara taste like?

Expect the variety's core character — butterscotch, chocolate, bright citrus, distinctive herbal-savory undertone — shaped by Guatemala's terroir toward chocolate, spice, apple and stone-fruit acidity, full body.

When is Pacamara from Guatemala available fresh?

The Guatemalan harvest runs december – march; fresh-crop lots typically reach consuming markets one to three months after milling, shipped via Puerto Quetzal (Pacific).

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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