Born into an agricultural family in Rio Grande do Sul, the southernmost state of Brazil, Inácio Urban moved north to Minas Gerais in the 1980s to pursue the incredible opportunity he saw in the subregion of Cerrado Mineiro. Inácio acquired land gradually, starting with just 20 hectares of coffee, and today Fazenda Rio Brilhante is an astonishing 2,700 hectares: about 60% coffee, 20% native forest preserve, and the other 20% cotton, beans, and corn.
Today Minas Gerais is known to be a powerhouse of coffee production - responsible for around 15% of the world's coffee - but in the 1980s it was a newly emerging origin, ascending as production declined in the more southern state of Paraná (which is now too regularly prone to hard frosts). Cerrado Mineiro's coffee farms exemplify modern Brazilian production - massive tracts of land, smooth terrain, and a long, warm, and dry harvest season ideal for the production of natural and pulped natural coffees.
In 2006, Inácio's children joined him in operating the family business. Today the Urban family remains heavily involved in the daily management of the farm, but works in conjunction with the team at Los Volcanes Coffee - our longtime sourcing partners in Guatemala, who are now working in Brazil and El Salvador as well. Similar to their work with partnered farms in Guatemala, their purpose is to design and implement agronomic and processing protocols to increase quality and productivity in an ecologically- and socially-responsible manner.
Rio Brilhante is triple the size of the next largest farm we buy from, and at this enormous scale coffee production looks different, utilizing colheitadeiras or combine harvesters to gather coffee during the harvest. Elsewhere, selective handpicking is necessary to ensure quality, but these harvesters employed in the right context can often enable better harvest management: calibrated for careful, precise work for premium lots, or calibrated for quick and complete harvesting for commercial production. To aid in this effort, farms in this part of Brazil are often arranged in a manner that promotes uniformity - with sections organized according to variety and spaced in a very regular and tidy manner.
Rio Brilhante is mostly flat with some gently rolling areas between 900 and 1,150 meters of elevation. The microregion to which it belongs, Pântano, enjoys well-defined seasons with good rainfall during the rainy season. The farm is divided into 45 sections growing several coffee varieties - mostly bourbon, arara, catuaí, catucaí, and topazio - and plots are separated by grevillea, mahogany, annatto, and casuarina trees. Harvest runs from May or June until September, employing as many as 240 people during the peak of harvest season and 135 year round.
This is our fourth year purchasing coffee from Rio Brilhante and we're thrilled with the quality, even as traceable Brazilian coffees have suddenly become scarce. We're excited to share this lot and proud to continue our work with the incredible team at Los Volcanes.
Ready for a cup of excellence?
TASTING NOTES
Milk Chocolate, Hazelnut, Dried Apple
ROAST LEVEL
Light
PROCESS
Natural
VARIETIES
Bourbon, Topazio, Catuai
REGION
Pântano, Cerrado Mineiro, Minas Gerais
ELEVATION
900-1,150 masl
PRODUCERS
Urban Family & Los Volcanes Coffee
SOURCE
Fazenda Rio Brilhante



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