Region
Cauca sits in southwestern Colombia and is home to high, cool Andean terrain with volcanic-derived soils—conditions that slow cherry maturation and help build dense seeds with clear, layered acidity. This Pink Bourbon lot comes from 1,960 m.a.s.l., where moderated daytime temperatures and reliable cloud cover support steady development and sweetness in the cup.
Within Cauca’s quality-focused microlot scene, producers are leaning into controlled fermentations (time/temperature management in sealed tanks, thermal-shock finishes) and careful lot separation to push clarity and aromatic intensity, even as conventional washed processing continues to define most regional output. Finca El Paraíso is a clear example of this direction—its tightly specified, repeatable protocol is part of why this lot reads so perfumed and structured.
Farm
Finca El Paraíso is operated by Diego Bermúdez and family, and it functions as both a working farm and a processing R&D site. Cherries are received with strict ripeness standards, and innovative micro-lots are washed to control the starting microbiology, and tracked through multi-stage fermentations that are measured in hours, not days, with temperature, pH, and pressure logged as they go. Thermal-shock washing—cycling hot water and then cold—has become a signature here, used to arrest fermentation at a precise moment and set aromatic precursors before drying. Drying is just as deliberate: clean, recirculated air, stable temperature and humidity, and a final rest to equalize moisture before milling. Lots are kept separate by variety and protocol, and the farm’s cupping room validates outcomes before export. This highly detailed and careful approach to variety separation and process control create repeatable outcomes and why El Paraíso coffees are highly sought after.