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Village Collective Roasters
 

 do good. drink coffee.

 
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our driving force

The coffee industry is a notoriously exploitative economic system that holds small rural farmers in a cycle of poverty. The vco. business structure allows every purchase to have a direct impact on real people.

Transforming the lives of workers who matter happens one bag at a time.

 
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our meaningful impact

By joining the Village Collective, you'll make real, tangible impact.

 

direct
trade

Trading directly with farmers cuts out unnecessary intermediaries and makes all of our coffee fully traceable. Up and down the supply chain, everyone involved receives fair pay, an average 50% premium to prevailing market rates. We guarantee our farmers a living and fair wage. We know who grows our coffee; we know where it is grown and how it is processed.

women
empowered

By trading directly with women, we increase community impact. Female economic empowerment is a step towards gender equality, and improves local health, and education. The women we proudly invest in transform communities and economies.

collective
equity

Our growers receive a portion of all profits to implement projects that improve their communities in the ways that they see fit.

technically
innovative

vco. incentivizes and empowers our producers every step of the process. Working directly with farmers means we can invest proceeds from the coffee to improve the soil’s quality, the beans’ quality, and the process’s quality. As quality improves, we guarantee that additional profits reach the growers.

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source roasted in Guatemala

We roast our beans within miles of where they’re produced, creating a coffee unmatched in freshness and quality, roasted by those who know the terroir best. Just as important, it cultivates a shared value model where maximum benefits remain for producers.

We process our coffee 3 ways

washed process

MAcadamia. MIlk Chocolate. Chamomile flowers.

This is the most common method of processing coffee. First, we strip the fruit pulp leaving behind the coffee bean (seed) that we next soak in water. This removes the sticky, sugary mucilage and allows the bean to be sun-dried and stored. Sometimes we add yeast during the soaking process for fermentation, modifying the pH, or tinkering with unique flavor profiles.

natural process

blueberry. Cacao nibs. dried cranberries.

Natural or “dry” process coffees are the most traditional method of processing. The entire coffee cherry is left intact in the sun to dry like a raisin around the bean. No pulping, no washing. Natural fermentation occurs and results in a complex combination of flavors and sugars. This is the longest process, but the least resource intensive and uses almost no water.

honey process

caramel corn. sundried orange. brown sugar.

Honey processing is a hybrid process where the fresh coffee cherries are de-pulped and immediately laid to dry naturally. Because we do not wash them and their sugary mucilage remains intact, the sun caramelizes the natural sugars resulting in subtle, sweet flavors. This sweetness of the caramelized sugar emerges during the roasting process and creates a rich, smooth profile.

 

coffee for export is processed and stripped of its protective coating, called parchment. It immediately begins to oxidize and degrade. oxidation causes the essential oils in the bean to deteriorate and creates gross flavors. because we roast all our coffees at their origin, we store our coffees in their protective coating (parchment) until the day of roasting, resulting in a freshness unachievable with coffee roasted in the U.S.

 
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be a part of the village