Love it , really smooth ,just right amount of chocolate flavour !!
INDIA
Indian Monsoon Malabar
Monsoon Malabar is unlike anything else in the coffee world, and that's entirely the point. Grown in the rainforest highlands of Karnataka and subjected to a centuries-old processing method unique to India's Malabar Coast, this is a coffee defined by its earthiness, its weight, and its almost savoury depth. Soy nut, cedar, and popcorn notes make for a cup that's bold, grounding, and utterly distinctive. It's a natural anchor in espresso blends, but compelling enough to stand entirely on its own.
Harvested between November and January at elevations ranging from 900 to 1,600 metres, this coffee is shaped as much by what happens after picking as by where it's grown.
Notes: Floral & sweet, with spicey, earthy tones
Pickup available at Java Works Coffee (Mon-Fri | 8:30am - 4:00pm)
Usually ready in 24 hours
PRODUCER PROFILE
About Monsoon Malabar
Varietal: ?
This offering is not traceable to a single variety, which is actually part of what makes Indian coffee interesting. The most commonly cultivated varieties in the region include Kent, Tafarikela, San Ramon, Catuai, Cauvery, and Typica, many of them developed through India's long history of proactive breeding. The country grows some of the most genetically diverse coffee in the world, a legacy of both colonial cultivation and a deep, ongoing commitment to developing resilient and flavourful plant stock.
Region: Karnataka
Karnataka produces 65% of India's coffee, centred around the Sahyadri Mountain Range, also known as the Western Ghats. The range runs along the southwest coast of India, intercepting the seasonal monsoon winds that carry heavy rainfall from the Arabian Sea. Average elevations sit around 1,200 metres, with peaks exceeding 2,000 metres, and the region receives between 120 and 160 inches of rain during monsoon season. That persistent moisture and lush forest cover create a temperate rainforest climate where coffee has thrived for centuries. It is, quite literally, where Indian coffee was born.
Process: Monsooning
The monsooning process has its roots in the age of sailing trade between India and Europe. Coffee shipped from the Malabar Coast spent months at sea, exposed to warm, humid monsoon air, and arrived in Europe transformed, lower in acidity, deeper in body, with a richness that became its own style of flavour. When faster shipping made that accidental transformation impossible, producers recreated it deliberately on land.
Today, harvested cherries are sun-dried, hulled, and then spread on large covered patios or in open warehouses where they absorb the ambient coastal moisture. Each week the coffee is re-bagged and restacked, repeating the cycle over six to seven weeks until the beans turn a distinctive golden yellow. The result is a coffee with tempered acidity, a full heavy body, and the chocolatey, earthy, spiced character that has made Monsoon Malabar a classic.
Harvest
November - January
Monsoon Process
1600 m.A.S.L