Rwanda BUHURI

by Good Beans

Write First Review
Sold Out

Packaging:

 
Roastery
Good Beans
Coffee Origin
Rwanda specialty coffee Rwanda
Region
Gakenke
Roast Type
Omni (recommended for both Filter & Espresso Coffee)
Process
Washed
Flavour Profile
Kiwi, Orange
Roast Level
Omni
Brewing Method
Aeropress, Chemex, Clever dripper, French Press, Hario V60, Moka pot, Vacuum Pot, Espresso

About Good Beans

Good Beans is run by a chatty American and a steady Norwegian. We were drawn first to a tiny shop in Amsterdam, and we stuck around to develop, deepen and spread a much bigger mission: making ethically-sourced coffee more approachable. Here’s a bit more about us:

Cody Reid-Dodick

Cody runs our coffee programming and keeps our branding fresh. He is determined to spread the resilient energy and progressive vision of the origin partners behind your delicious morning cup. You can find him most days in the shop, holding court with our growing group of neighbourhood regulars and talking passionately about the future of specialty coffee. Reach out to him for brand collaborations or guest roasting opportunities.

Harald Stangeland

The stoic Norwegian, Harald is our operator. He handles all things finances, sales, and logistics. In other words, he keeps us marching, nay, cross-country skiing,  towards peak efficiency. He also coaches our very own handball team, in a desperate attempt to relive his days playing professionally (in his own opinion) up North. Reach out to him for wholesale inquiries and potential partnerships.

Interview

Can you please introduce your roastery in a few short sentences?

We are an Amsterdam based roastery on a mission to make ethically-sourced specialty coffee more approachable. We have a cozy shop in central Amsterdam, which is the home of Fucking Strong Coffee: our line of fancy, impactfully-sourced beans for (fucking) everyone. No preaching, no minimalism, no exclusivity, just good, ethical specialty beans.

What is the story behind your name and logo?

When we look around at our buddies in the industry, we see a lot of great sourcers and talented roasters, but few really inclusive, effective storytellers. Our industry does a lot of preaching to coffee nerds, but not a lot of attracting novices who know less about coffee, sourcing, and how we are making a difference. A name like "Fucking Strong Coffee" is about being cheeky, approachable, anti-snob, and conversation-provoking.

What is the hardest part about being a roastery?

Keeping excitement about origin partners and cool projects in line with healthy business growth/strategic planning. It's easy to get carried away when so many people are doing cool things around us.

What is the one thing people still don’t get about coffee?

The pursuit of "specialty" is NOT the pursuit of "exclusivity" or "fanciness" -- ethically-sourced, high-quality, delicious coffee isn't just for the few.

Which one thing do you wish you’d done differently since starting a roasting business?

Been more proactive about meeting other roasters and integrating into the Amsterdam/NL/EU coffee scene, as opposed to just being cheeky outsiders. We're nice guys (we think!), we just like to do things our own way, but that doesn't mean we don't want to make more friends.

Is there a person in the industry people should know about?

Lennart Clerkx, the founder at our ethical importer This Side Up -- he doesn't just do things right, he redefines what "right" is.

What’s been your biggest failure?

We weren't quick enough to recognize the energy our customers would have around sustainability and reusability -- we should have started our can refill program earlier, and launched our reusable cups right off the bat.

What are you most proud of?

Growing our Amsterdam cafe from a couple of random customers a day, to a vibrant, incredibly supportive "clubhouse" of regulars from across the globe.

How will the specialty coffee market look like in 2025?

Hopefully... more approachable, less snobby, and as innovative as it is today. Also: more specialty drinking at origin!

Tell us a little bit about “The Cup” - the best cup of coffee you’ve ever tasted?

We have two. A filter in the little office of our partner cooperative's washing station in Gakenke, Rwanda after our first origin visit. And a ridiculously tasty cup from our buddies at Blommers (from NL) - a Costa Rican. TOO tropical :). 







Reviews

Reviews Total
0.0 / 5
Recommended by
0%
0 out of 0 users
Dominika Show Original January 6, 2021
Does not recommend
250g
You write omni, but it's really only for espresso. Not on the filter. It's a waste of money, at least you get a nice can for that money :(
Pavel Sevcik Show Original January 7, 2020
Does not recommend
250g
As a fan of light roasted coffees, I'm probably not the target, but I evaluate according to my tastes... You can smell the good coffee in the background, but it's - to me - simply over-roasted. So I can only recommend it to dark coffee lovers of a more conservative nature.
Matej Kondas Verified Customer Show Original December 13, 2019
Recommends
250g
A pleasantly strong and fruity affair. It definitely paid off here to make a strong, asphalt filter (25g on Aeropres) with less water than the classic "bucket" where I thought the taste was a little off. Good coffee for me, maybe
the darker roasting is a bit scary.
Sonky Verified Customer Show Original September 10, 2019
Recommends
250g
It is wonderfully aromatic, tasty and perfectly tuned for my taste. Aeropress preparation.

Questions (1x)

Questions Total
1
Answers Total
3
Translated from Kofio.cz Show Original
primarily for espresso, **but** it is also suitable for preparation :D
What is this?? Did some cobol write that?
Translated from Kofio.cz Show Original
Thanks for your contribution to the discussion. The coffee is roasted with a medium roast. The roaster roasts it primarily for espresso, but its roasting is also suitable for AeroPress and Frenchpress :). Best regards, Eliška
Translated from Kofio.cz Show Original
Eliška Veselá: Miss Eliška, I see that you are cheerful not only in name. I was not concerned with the content but with the form. I'm talking about "NO" This has nothing to do in literary Czech. And I see that you repeated the "NO" in your answer :D :D
Translated from Kofio.cz Show Original
Kiss: Oh, my mistake :). Thank you for the warning!