Costa Rica Hacienda Sonora Diego Guardia Victoria 14 Natural

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  • Country: Costa Rica

    Region: Carrillos Alto de Poás, Alajuela, Central Valley

    Farm: Hacienda Sonora

    Coordinates: 10° 2' 47.6495" N 84° 15' 40.2048" W

    Farmer/Grower: Alberto and Diego Guardia

    Cultivar: Victoria 14

    Processing: Natural

    Altitude: 1300 m.a.s.l.

    Marks: 005-0025-0207

    Reference ID: HA-25240-01

    Humidity: 11.60%

    Density: 1.16 g/ml

    Harvest Date: March, 2025

    Arrival Date: August, 2025

    SCA Cupping Score: 85.00

    Tariff Cost: $0.54

  • Fragrance and aroma of black cherry and brown spices. Notes of milk chocolate, red currant with an aftertaste of green grape and cherry. Tart malic acidity and a heavy syrupy body.
  • This coffee can be a bit tricky in the roasting process. It needs a lot of heat energy to continue moving through the roast, but then quickly shifts into exothermic reactions just prior to first crack. At the time of the exothermic reaction, the coffee will quickly take off and needs very little heat application to continue progressing through the end of the roast. This coffee will also have a fairly late first crack, so it may take less post-crack development to get to the desired development. At lighter roasts, the malic acidity and notes of dark cherry will shine. As the roast progresses in development, the cup will yield a heavy body and flavors of decadent chocolate-covered cherries. For detailed information roasting this coffee, check out our Roast Approach write up.


At Hacienda Sonora, hand-picked cherries are first dunked in water for floater separation, before the beans are dried inside the fruit (rather than after the fruit has been removed, as is the case with wet-processed or “washed” coffees). The cherries are dried on a black tarp on top of grass for 12 days using different layers depending on the drying stage (always covered at night). These controls keep temperatures low which preserves cup quality and shelf life of the coffee. After 12 days, the coffee is moved to the warehouse to rest for 3 days (at 14% humidity) before getting a final dry in a mechanical dryer (which allows better uniformity) at temperatures that never exceed 35C. Once the coffee reaches a humidity of 10.5%, it rests for 2 Months before being hauled out of the dry husk and then going through weight, screen, density and color sorting.