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best of yemen 2022 results

5.

Al Yair

Jury code : 6426


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jury score :

90.04


Genetics :

Yemenia

Process :

Carbonic Maceration Honey

lot size :

128.00LBS


traceability

VILLAGE :Al Yair

REGION : Hayma Dakhiliya

GOVERNORATE : Sanaa

ALTITUDE :1900-2000masl

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FLAVOUR PROFILE

Orange Blossom Marmalade, Candied Apricot, Roselle, Earl Grey


The coffee farming community of Al Yair
Al Yair, a large village in the western reaches of Sana’a governorate, clings to the rugged terrain at an altitude of 1,900 to 2,000 meters above sea level. Home to around 3,000 people, the village sees 120 families committed to the cultivation of coffee. The challenges are many—harsh terrain and scarce water chief among them—but the farmers of Al Yair are not easily deterred.

In recent years, with the support of Qima Coffee, traditional farming methods have been overhauled, giving rise to more modern practices. As a result, the farmers here are now producing more specialty coffee than ever before, a testament to their resilience and adaptability in the face of adversity.
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Genetics

Yemenia

Yemenia is a new mother population within the species of Coffea arabica that is found exclusively in Yemen, and represents an ocean of unexplored genetics and future varieties that have the potential to reshape the world of arabica for centuries to come.

Read the Scientific paper here. 

The discovery of Yemenia was part of Qima Coffee’s R&D programme with Dr Christophe Montagnon, the aim of which was to map out Yemen's coffee genetic landscape. Qima conducted the largest genetic survey in Yemen's history, covering an area of over 25,000 sq km.

Through rigorous research in coffee genetics, we discovered that there exists a mother population of Coffea arabica that never left Yemen, and remains native to the land till date: Yemenia – meaning Yemeni mother in Arabic. 

Yemen’s coffee land has a rough climate, displaying both high and low temperatures in the extreme range of coffee growing areas worldwide, together with one of the lowest global rainfall levels. There is no doubt that this environment has favoured resilient landraces, not only between the 1400s (coffee first introduced to Yemen) and 1700s (when today’s main worldwide coffee varieties were taken out of Yemen), but also during the last 300 years of coffee cultivation and propagation. The unveiling of Yemenia, which has not been observed anywhere else in the world so far, opens the gate to previously uncharted genetic diversity within C. arabica in general, and Yemeni coffee in particular. Further research is ongoing to determine and identify potential varieties within Yemenia group.  

Process

Carbonic Maceration Honey

TRACEABILITY

Al Yair

Al Yair, a large village perched at an altitude of 1,900 to 2,000 meters in the western part of Sana’a governorate, is home to around 3,000 people. Among them, about 120 families grow coffee, tending their crops on steep and rugged terrain. Water is scarce, and the landscape is unforgiving, yet the farmers remain undeterred by these challenges.

Hayma Dakhiliya

Hayma Dakhiliya is a coffee growing region located in the west of the Sana’a governorate, it is one of the governorate’s most well-known regions. The region has 11 mountainous villages located 50km west of the capital city of Sana’a. Some of the villages in Hayma Dakhiliya include Al Yaer, Bait Yaseen, Al Mezab and Bait Al Kabsh. However, due to the rough terrain and rugged roads, the villages are hard to reach and remain isolated from the city. Due to the location of the villages in this region, access to education and healthcare is limited. 

However, coffee trees have been struggling with diseases impacting the region’s outturn of coffee cherries and overall yield. Low yield is a problem affecting the Yemeni coffee industry; however, Hayma Dakhiliya is particularly struggling with this issue and as result, the region has the lowest yield in Yemen. 

Sanaa

The governorate of Sana’a not only has the biggest share of specialty coffee production, in both quality and quantity in Yemen but also has one of the longest continuous coffee cultures in the world. Much of the coffee consumed in Sana’a is prepared using the traditional Ibrik method, brewing coffee in a copper or silver pot over hot charcoals.

10:00AM BST LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM

2:00AM PDT LA, USA

5:00AM EDT NY, USA

11:00AM CEST AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS

12:00PM AST RIYADH, SAUDI ARABIA

1:00PM GST DUBAI, UAE

5:00PM CST BEIJING, CHINA

5:00PM HKT HONG KONG, HONG KONG

6:00PM JST  TOKYO, JAPAN

6:00PM KST SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA

7:00PM AEST SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA

BoY 24
OCTOBER 8


best of yemen 2022 results

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