Kenya Nandi Peaberry

Regular price£9.50
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Size
Ground For

ROAST

 

  • Farm: Various Smallholders
  • Location: Nandi County
  • Altitude: 1800m
  • Process: Washed
  • Varietal: Ruiri 11, Batian

Cupping Notes

Tangerine, Black Tea, Light and Balanced

More Information

Our premium range is designed to showcase the best of what coffee can be worldwide, and this lot from Kenya offers something both unique and rare to the coffee world – the peaberry. A peaberry is a rare but naturally occurring mutation within the coffee cherry that means rather than two flat sided beans within a cherry, only one perfectly rounded bean is produced. It occurs in 1-10% of coffee cherries, dependant on the varietal. A well grown and processed peaberry has the potential to produce great sweetness and vibrance within a coffee, and through our East-African sourcing partners Omwani, Lot 20 Coffee in Kenya have brought us just that. 

It’s a privilege to buy coffee’s from Lot20 and their founder Sydney Kibet. Sydney travelled with Steff in November 2025 to Zambia to see the Mount Sunzu farm, and then came to visit us in February this year with the team from Omwani for our cupping event with them. It was great to spend some time with him, his joy and passion for coffee and life is infectious!

Lot 20 Coffee's mission is centred on improving coffee processing techniques while staying grounded in local communities. By choosing to operate smaller processing facilities in Kericho rather than large, high-tech facilities in Nairobi, Lot 20 aims to keep value within local communities. This grassroots approach supports the local economy and provides employment opportunities, particularly for women.

Lot 20 Coffee is deeply committed to supporting local farmers and improving livelihoods. The company ensures that farmers receive premium prices for their cherries, mitigating the financial risks that farmers typically face in the volatile coffee market. This is in contrast to the conventional coffee supply chain in Kenya, where farmers often receive minimal compensation after numerous middlemen take a share of the profits. Lot 20 pays farmers upfront, removing the uncertainty of fluctuating prices.

 


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