Laos · Processing
Natural Process in Laos
Natural Process (Dry process, sun-dried) is one of the processing methods that defines Lao coffee. With a harvest running october – february and production of ≈500,000 60-kg bags, Laos's producers choose their processing methods around climate, water access, and the market position of regions like Bolaven Plateau (Champasak) and Paksong district.
The method's practical profile matters at origin: water use is minimal — essentially none beyond flotation sorting, which is why naturals dominate in water-scarce regions., drying takes 14–30 days depending on climate and bed loading., and the key risks are mold, phenolic and fermented defects from slow or uneven drying; higher lot-to-lot variability. Those constraints interact directly with Laos's harvest-season weather and infrastructure — the reason the method took root here in the first place.
In the cup, natural process pushes Lao coffee toward heavy body, intense berry and tropical fruit, lower perceived acidity, wine-like sweetness. signature profile of ethiopian and brazilian naturals., layered over the origin's underlying character of washed arabica: red apple, caramel, milk chocolate, brown-sugar sweetness with gentle citric acidity. Comparing the same Lao coffee across processing methods is one of the clearest ways to taste what processing actually does.
Key facts
| Method | Natural Process (Dry process, sun-dried) |
|---|---|
| Flavor impact | Heavy body, intense berry and tropical fruit, lower perceived acidity, wine-like sweetness. Signature profile of Ethiopian and Brazilian naturals. |
| Water use | Minimal — essentially none beyond flotation sorting, which is why naturals dominate in water-scarce regions. |
| Drying time | 14–30 days depending on climate and bed loading. |
| Key risks | Mold, phenolic and fermented defects from slow or uneven drying; higher lot-to-lot variability. |
| Laos harvest | October – February |
| Laos altitude | 800–1,350 m (Bolaven Plateau) |
| Export gateways | Vientiane (dry port, rail to China), Laem Chabang (Thailand, via Pakse), Da Nang (Vietnam) |
Related Laos regions
Natural Process in Laos — frequently asked questions
Why do Lao producers use natural process?
It fits the origin's conditions: minimal — essentially none beyond flotation sorting, which is why naturals dominate in water-scarce regions. water requirements and 14–30 days depending on climate and bed loading. drying suit the october – february harvest window, and the method's cup results — heavy body, intense berry and tropical fruit, lower perceived acidity, wine-like sweetness. signature profile of ethiopian and brazilian naturals. — match what buyers seek from Laos.
How does natural process change the taste of Lao coffee?
It layers heavy body, intense berry and tropical fruit, lower perceived acidity, wine-like sweetness. signature profile of ethiopian and brazilian naturals. over Laos's base character of washed arabica: red apple, caramel, milk chocolate, brown-sugar sweetness with gentle citric acidity.
What are the risks of natural process in Laos?
Mold, phenolic and fermented defects from slow or uneven drying; higher lot-to-lot variability. 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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