Farm info

Finca El Paraiso is located in the municipality of Piendamo, Corrigimiento de Tunia, Vereda los Arados along the stretch of the Panamerican highway between Popayan and Cali. Its climate is humid with winds from the Pacific. Cherries mature slowly given El Paraiso’s elevation ; this slow maturation helps the concentration of sugars and considerably improves the cup. El Paraiso uses processing technology that focuses on developing the citric flavors of the coffee and is environmentally-friendly while also independent of climate factors, allowing for consistent quality. 

Producer Diego Samuel Bermudez Tapia is one of the partners in INDESTEC (Innovacion y Desarollo Tecnologico para el Agro; Innovation and Technological Development for Agriculture) and in Finca El Paraiso. He was born in Bolivar, Cauca and holds a title in Agricultural Business Administration. 12 years ago, coffee began as an adventure and became his way of life. 

Today, Diego is the director of INDESTEC, a family business dedicated to production, processing, and commercialization of specialty coffee. El Paraiso produces Natural coffee, and Washed coffees with three styles of controlled, anaerobic (sealed) fermentations. 

Eco-Enigma Regional 

Finca El Paraiso’s mill also receives coffee from allied producers in the community. Cherries are reviewed for ripeness and then fermented, in cherry, for 36 hours. They are depulped and washed then dried for 24 hours at 34 degrees Celsius in the Eco-Enigma processing equipment made by INDESTEC. The technology operates through closed circuit air recirculation and controlled temperature. The Eco-Enigma uses condensation and recirculation to minimize the environmental impact of processing while creating replicable conditions to dry coffee to between 10-11.5% humidity regardless of climate factors.

Region

Cauca

The Colombian department of Cauca lies in the southwestern part of the country, with the Pacific Ocean to the west, Valle del Cauca Department to the north, Tolima Department to the northeast, Huila Department to the east, and Nariño, Putumayo, and Caqueta Departments to the south. Many rivers traverse Cauca and the Central Range of the Andes Mountains runs through the department. Popayan is the capital city and Cauca’s population is distributed throughout the rural highlands and valleys.