Colombia: Mikava Santuario Extended

Colombia: Mikava Santuario Extended

Caffè Tomassi

About This Coffee

A Gesha variety coffee from Santuario, Risaralda, Colombia, grown by Paul and Kevin Doyle (Mikava) at 2000 meters altitude on volcanic hillsides near Parque Nacional Tatamá. Harvested in 2024, it undergoes a natural process with carbonic maceration in pressurized tanks for 20 days, followed by sun drying for one week and a slow ventilated marquesina drying (SASD – Solar Aerobic Slow Dry). Flavor notes include cherry, melon, rose, strawberry, raspberry, wild strawberry, and blueberry, with a medium, juicy body and layered lactic-malic acidity. Recommended for filter and moka brewing.

Origin

Santuario (Colombia)

Flavor Notes

Rose, Raspberry, Blueberry, Strawberry, Cherry, Melon, Wild Strawberry

Roast Level

Light, Medium

Processing

Natural With Carbonic Maceration, Natural Carbonic Maceration

Typology

Arabica
Maragesha
CT

Caffè Tomassi

Emanuele Tomassi built his micro roastery as a natural extension of Caos, his coffee bar in Aprilia south of Rome, after a chance meeting with Klaus Thomsen, World Barista Champion and co founder of Coffee Collective, during a period living in Denmark in 2009 ignited a passion for specialty coffee that redirected his career. The roastery, which Emanuele describes as his "games room" in the back of the bar, uses technology to manage the roasting curve and produces specialty coffee for both espresso and filter using omni roast profiles. Emanuele won the Italian Coffee Roasting Championship in 2018 and again in 2024, establishing himself as one of the most decorated competition roasters in the country, and the operation is now a father and son affair. Tomassi Coffee represented Italy at Roast Masters Milan 2019 alongside barista Jorge Albarracin Quintero, and provides descriptive estate information for every coffee it sells, emphasizing the story and terroir behind each origin. The micro roastery continues to roast from Aprilia with the same curiosity driven philosophy that a Danish encounter planted more than fifteen years ago.