Specialty Coffee Blog – Pull & Pour

Ethiopia Suke Uraga – Crema Coffee Roasters

Ethiopia Suke Uraga - Crema

Coffee Details

Coffee Name

Ethiopia Suke Uraga

Roaster

Crema Coffee Roasters

Roaster Location

Nashville, Tennessee

Estimated Price

$19.00 / 12 oz

Flavor Profile

Watermelon, lime, honey

Process

Fully washed, dried on raised beds

Country

Ethiopia

Region

Guji, Uraga

Elevation

1900 – 2150 MASL

Producer

Negusse Rebels

Roast

Light

Roast Date

July 8, 2020

Reviewed Date

July 26, 2020

Coffee Scoring

Overall Score

8.9 / 10

Aroma

9 / 10

Body

8.5 / 10

Flavor

9.5 / 10

Acidity/Brightness

8.5 / 10

Balance

9 / 10

Sweetness

9.5 / 10

Cleanliness

9 / 10

Aftertaste

8.5 / 10

Complexity

8.5 / 10

Flexibility

9 / 10

Pros

  • Sweetness

Cons

  • Fairly traditional Ethiopian coffee, lacks uniqueness

I’d heard about Crema Coffee Roasters from a variety of people both on Instagram and friends that live in Nashville. A few weeks back when we were driving through Nashville on our way to Asheville for vacation, I made a point to stop by and try their coffee. While there I picked up this bag of washed Ethiopian coffee to experiment with at home.

The coffee began with a strong, sweet aroma of chocolate and citrus. As I began brewing, a burst of citrus aromatics exploded from the coffee. In the flavor I tasted the same chocolate and citrus undertones, but also a candy-like sweetness that reminded me of watermelon jolly ranchers. The coffee had a crisp, but thinner body and a lingering acidity and sweetness in the finish that reminded me of the flavor left on your tongue after finishing a piece of hard candy.

The coffee worked well for both espresso and pour over brew methods. There wasn’t a ton of complexity in the cup or evolution of the flavors, but it was still a very delicious coffee.

The Bottom Line

While Suke Uraga wasn’t incredibly complex and fit the mold of what you’d expect in a washed Ethiopian coffee without much variance, it was still quite delicious and at the end of the day, that is what really matters most.

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