Coffee Tasting Guide: 6 Specialty Coffee Beans from Panama, Colombia & Costa Rica

 “Coffee Tasting Banquet” is a kind of tasting experience created for coffee enthusiasts. For coffee shops, this format allows them to test market reactions and collect customer feedback through a sharing-based event. The concept itself provides an excellent setting for both tasting and discussion. At this particular event, they brought six outstanding beans from different origins. Taking advantage of this tasting session, I’d like to share some thoughts about these six coffee regions and the flavor characteristics of their beans.

The first bean comes from Roble Estate in Colombia. The farm reaches elevations of up to 1,800 meters and is located in the town of Pitalito in Huila. The owner, Dionel, named this coffee sanctuary after a century-old oak tree that inspired him. The estate places great emphasis on precision throughout the processing stage. After handpicking, the cherries undergo flotation to remove defects, followed by a second manual sorting to eliminate unripe fruit. Because the climate in Huila can change drastically, strict humidity control is required to quickly reduce moisture levels during processing. Additionally, the farm enforces strict no-smoking and no-eating policies during processing to ensure the cleanest possible environment and preserve the coffee’s purest flavor characteristics.

This particular bean is a Geisha from Roble Estate, processed with 36 hours of anaerobic dry fermentation followed by a honey process. Both the dry aroma after grinding and the wet aroma after brewing carry a refreshing, delicate floral-fruit profile that feels almost like a traditional washed coffee. Before the first sip even reaches the palate, there is an extended fragrance of gardenia. Then comes an incredibly clear note of green mandarin—specifically reminiscent of the flavor you get when pu-erh tea is stuffed into a small green citrus and steeped together. Honestly, it’s fantastic. That flavor memory feels quite sophisticated, and I absolutely love it.

The second bean is one I’ve been eager to try for a long time: coffee from Altieri Estate in Panama. I had heard its reputation for years but never had the chance to taste it—until now. Altieri Estate has been one of the big names in recent years. Over the past eleven years in the Best of Panama (BOP) competition, the estate has appeared on the leaderboard eleven times, which speaks volumes about its strength.

Altieri Estate is a family business founded in 2005 by Italian-American entrepreneur Eugene Altieri, who moved to Panama in 1973. Twenty years ago, Eugene purchased two farms in Boquete, though at the time the land’s potential for specialty coffee had not yet been realized. Today, his children continue the family legacy, working with professional teams to expand the Altieri Specialty Coffee brand. For the family, coffee is not merely a business—it’s a passion.

One particularly touching aspect of this farm is its human warmth. Instead of assigning cold numerical codes to the coffee plots, Eugene named each carefully planned parcel after one of his eleven grandchildren. If you browse their website, you can truly feel the warmth of a close-knit family. It makes the estate both memorable and unique.

What’s special about this bean is that it comes from a famous coffee estate but is not a Geisha variety. Instead, it’s a Catuai processed with 96 hours of dry fermentation followed by dark-room natural processing. In an era where many prestigious farms focus heavily on Geisha, tasting some of their more “ordinary” varieties can be refreshing. Not only are they often more cost-effective, but they also allow you to better appreciate the estate’s technical expertise—especially in processing.

As we know, Catuai is a reliable and balanced coffee variety. It may not deliver the explosive floral aroma and acidity of top-tier Geisha, but its stable quality, bright acidity, and comfortable sweetness make it a popular choice in everyday specialty coffee. If you’re looking for a coffee with a friendly profile and balanced sweetness and acidity, Catuai is rarely a wrong choice.

The dry aroma of this bean smells intensely sweet—like fruit candy—an aroma that instantly lifts your mood. After brewing, the coffee maintains impressive clarity and cleanliness. The flavor layers are somewhat short, and the detectable notes are fairly concentrated, but considering the extended fermentation time, achieving such cleanliness is already a safe and commendable result.

The third bean comes from Auromar Estate in Panama, a washed Green Tip Geisha. Auromar is another highly talked-about estate. I actually wrote a dedicated review about it previously because I really like this farm—starting with its name. Auromar is located in the Chiriquí province of northwestern Panama, in a valley on the western side of the Barú Volcano.

The estate covers 31 hectares, of which 16 hectares are preserved tropical rainforest. The remaining 15 hectares are planted with coffee trees, growing at elevations between 1,485 and 1,700 meters, while the overall farm sits between 1,700 and 1,775 meters above sea level. Tall shade trees are interplanted throughout the farm. With year-round temperatures ranging from 16°C to 25°C and annual rainfall around 3,500 mm, the conditions are ideal for coffee cultivation.

Interestingly, the dry fragrance of this bean doesn’t immediately feel like a typical washed profile. Instead, it gives a sense of density and structure, making you anticipate a fuller body after brewing. Once brewed, the first impression is a soft citrus note, which soon transitions into a white-tea-like texture accompanied by honeyed sweetness. The sweetness and cleanliness are both excellent, though the flavor intensity and layering feel somewhat subdued. The mouthfeel, however, is very round.

Sometimes people are contradictory about coffee. We often say flavor is everything—but honestly, I love great mouthfeel even more. A coffee that is clean, round, and silky can easily surpass flavor complexity in terms of enjoyment. When you drink something so smooth and pure, it’s almost impossible not to love it.

The fourth bean comes from Barbara Estate in Panama, an anaerobic natural Green Tip Geisha. This estate is another well-known farm in Panama’s Boquete region. Barbara Estate is owned by the Rogers family and jointly managed by Hunter Tedman and Linda Arauz.

The farm sits at elevations between 1,450 and 1,700 meters, with fertile volcanic soil, cool mountain climates, and a misty cloud-forest environment. These conditions allow the coffee cherries to ripen slowly, resulting in higher sweetness and more complex flavor development.

Barbara Estate is best known for its Geisha variety, admired for its floral aromas, tea-like elegance, and bright acidity. The farm uses various processing methods—washed, natural, and honey—to precisely showcase tropical fruit notes, bright acidity, and layered, clean flavors.

Currently, Barbara Estate operates three plantations: the Jaramillo plot in Boquete, the Treasure plot in Renacimiento, and the Wizard plot in Potrerillos. Over the years, the estate has achieved multiple strong placements in the Best of Panama competition, solidifying its reputation as a top-tier specialty coffee producer.

The dry aroma of this bean once again hits exactly the flavor profile I love: sweet floral and fruity notes. That gentle sweetness instantly brings joy. After brewing, I found its flavor layering more appealing than the previous bean, though their overall flavor outlines are somewhat similar despite very different processing methods. What stands out the most is the cleanliness—it’s almost absurdly clean. If the flavor progression becomes slightly more layered, this would be an easy “buy-with-eyes-closed” coffee for me.

Typically, a coffee tasting banquet starts with light and refreshing profiles and gradually moves toward heavier, more intense coffees. The last two beans felt more mysterious and delivered some rather unique experiences.

The fifth bean is a Geisha from Bandera Estate in Costa Rica, processed with Golden Honey. In recent years, Costa Rican coffees don’t seem to dominate conversations the way they once did. Regardless of how honey processing is executed, the flavor differences between levels sometimes feel less dramatic compared to the wave of experimental processing methods emerging from other origins. As a result, Costa Rica can occasionally feel a bit understated.

Bandera Estate is located in the Tarrazú region, one of Costa Rica’s most renowned coffee-growing areas, with elevations exceeding 1,900 meters. The exceptional terroir provides the foundation for great flavor, and Tarrazú frequently appears at the top of the Cup of Excellence (COE) rankings.

The owner, Diego, expanded Geisha production and introduced five different processing styles: fermented washed, golden honey, red honey, white honey, and fermented natural. His coffees are known for their extremely high fruit maturity, dense structure, rich compounds, and carefully controlled fermentation, resulting in remarkable cleanliness.

What intrigued me most was the processing term “Golden Honey.” What exactly does that mean? In reality, “Golden Honey” is not a globally standardized term. It’s more of a marketing-level name used by certain farms or mills. From the perspective of this particular coffee, it represents Bandera Estate’s refined and high-standard interpretation of the traditional honey process.

As we know, the essence of honey processing lies in carefully controlling the amount of mucilage retained, the turning frequency, and the drying conditions to achieve maximum cleanliness, sweetness, and complex fruit notes. You can think of “Golden Honey” as a finely calibrated point somewhere between Yellow Honey and Red Honey in the traditional processing spectrum—simply labeled by the farm owner to represent their ideal standard.

At the tasting event, this coffee might have been roasted quite recently. The first sip genuinely surprised me. The flavor had an unexpectedly savory dimension. Honestly, it was the first time I clearly perceived an umami-like note in coffee. Perhaps it had something to do with a delicate roasting threshold—I’m not entirely sure. After that initial surprise, the profile moved into yellow fruit notes and a brown sugar sweetness. The depth of flavor was actually quite good. Because of that unusual savory impression, it ended up being one of the coffees I remembered the most.

The final bean of the tasting was a Geisha from Janson Estate in Panama, processed with 48 hours of GP bag fermentation followed by natural drying. Janson Estate is another famous Panamanian coffee farm with over 70 years of coffee cultivation and processing history.

The estate is located west of Barú Volcano, benefiting from rich volcanic soil and natural spring water. The farm integrates its coffee fields with a 200-hectare private nature reserve, including lagoons and wetlands that provide habitats for numerous bird species and wildlife.

Janson Estate is operated by the first and second generations of the Janson family and has won multiple Best of Panama awards, which has attracted growing attention from coffee enthusiasts in recent years.

Among the six coffees, this one had the most intense flavor profile. Its dry aroma was incredibly sweet, while the brewed fragrance carried strong fermentation notes. The first sip delivered the classic complexity of tropical fruit typically associated with fermented processing methods.

What impressed me was that despite the extended fermentation and experimental processing, the brewed cup remained remarkably clean. The finish carried a beautiful sweetness. However, the pronounced fermentation character also gave me a strange feeling—I couldn’t help thinking that Janson had somehow “fallen from grace.” I remember earlier Janson coffees that once amazed me. Half jokingly, I even said it now tastes like it has “turned Colombian.”

From a commercial perspective, though, this coffee could serve as a great gateway coffee for beginners entering the world of advanced specialty processing methods. After all, the rising popularity of experimental processing is largely driven by market demand.

Still, I have to say—a coffee with such strong fermentation notes yet maintaining this level of cleanliness is genuinely impressive.

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