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Peru Eduardo Llano Linares Pache

Peru Eduardo Llano Linares Pache

Archetype

About This Coffee

Eduardo Llanos is a coffee producer by both heritage and deep-seated conviction. He mastered the craft from his father, spending his childhood and youth amidst the coffee trees. Today, he carries that family tradition forward, cultivating coffee with profound dedication and pride. It is through this harvest that he sustains his family; for Eduardo, coffee represents not only his primary source of livelihood but also a multi generational legacy that remains vibrant in every bean he produces. His farm El Roble (name of a native tree of the area that can be easily found within the farm) is located in the district of Querocoto. Querocoto is a remote and unique district located in the Cajamarca's Chota province. To reach Querocoto, you first fly into the city of Chiclayo, then drive five hours via paved road to the town center._Despite being only a few hours away from the renowned coffee-growing province of Jaén, the people, land, and climate of Querocoto areremarkably different._Historically, Querocoto was not dedicated to coffee production. Its main economic activity was cattle ranching, supported by vast expanses ofpasture land and a cold climate typical of its average altitude of 2,300 meters above sea level. In the 1990s, many locals began migrating seasonally to Jaén and San Ignacio to work as harvesters on coffee farms. In the early 2000s, some of them brought coffee seeds back to Chota to test whether the plants could grow at its high altitude with its soil composition. It was a success: coffee_adapted perfectly to its new environment._Producers in the area have always shown deep respect for the land and its native flora, seeking to cultivate an ecosystem in which local plants_coexist with coffee production._A notable example is the use of the native quina tree for shade. The quina tree may be the most important tree in Peru, so important that it appears_on the National Coat of Arms._Native to the high Andean regions and known since Inca times, its bark was originally used to make alcoholic beverages (yonque). In the 17th_century, French scientists discovered that quinine, then the only effective treatment for malaria, could be extracted from this tree. For centuries,quina populated large areas of Peru; however, the massive introduction of foreign species, such as eucalyptus, and indiscriminate logging pushed it_toward extinction._Today, Querocoto is one of the few places in Peru where quina trees still thrive, coexisting in perfect synergy with coffee plants by providing shade and organic matter.

Origin

Querocoto (Peru)

Flavor Notes

Roast Level

Processing

Typology

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Archetype

Archetype was founded by Isaiah Sheese in Omaha, Nebraska, drawing on roughly 20 years of specialty coffee experience including stints at Doubleshot Coffee, Topeca Coffee Roasters, and Anodyne Coffee Roasters. Sheese won the 2023 U.S. Barista Championship and went on to place fourth at the World Barista Championship the same year, using a Pink Bourbon from Finca Buena Vista in Colombia for his competition coffee. The roastery takes a small batch approach focused on single origin coffees and seasonal features, with a style the team describes as Scandi merican, blending Nordic influence with an American sensibility. Archetype operates three locations across Omaha: the Blackstone District flagship, a Little Bohemia site housing the roastery training lab and production facility, and a third in the Millwork Commons development.

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