-
Coffee by kind
- Coffee beans - 100% Arabica
- Flavoured coffee beans with 100% Arabica
- Organic and Fair Trade coffee beans
- Coffee beans - 100% Robusta
- Decaffeinated coffee beans
- Decaffeinated flavoured coffee beans
- Coffee for Dripper, V60
- Espresso blends
- Instant coffee
- Flavoured instant coffee
- Cascara (coffee cherry tea) and coffee products
- Green coffee
-
Coffee by country of origin
- Australia coffee
- Bali coffee
- Bolivia coffee
- Brazilian coffee
- Burundi coffee
- Cameroon coffee
- Colombia coffee
- Congo coffee
- Costa Rica coffee
- Cuban coffee
- Dominican coffee
- Ecuadorian coffee
- El Salvador coffee
- Ethiopia coffee
- Guatemala coffee
- Guinejská káva
- Hawaii coffee
- Honduras coffee
- Indian coffee
- Indonesia and Java coffee
- Ivory Coast coffee
- Jamaica coffee
- Kenya coffee
- Malawi coffee
- Mexican coffee
- Myanmar (Burma) coffee
- Nepalese coffee
- Nicaragua coffee
- Panama coffee
- Papua New Guinea coffee
- Peru coffee
- Puerto Rico coffee
- Rwanda coffee
- Tanzania coffee
- Timor coffee
- Togo káva
- Uganda coffee
- Venezuela káva
- Vietnam coffee
- Yemen coffee
- Zambia coffee
- Zimbabwe coffee
Why our products?
- Free shipping on orders over 49 €
- Satisfied customers
- Delivery date is specified within the product description
Malawi coffee
Malawi has about four thousand small coffee farms, so its production is not very large in terms of volume. But when it comes to quality, it is a different story. Malawian coffee is sweet, smooth, and floral, with notes of liquorice and spices. Coffee lovers in countries such as Germany, Japan, the… view all
There are no matching products
Malawi coffee
Malawi has about four thousand small coffee farms, so its production is not very large in terms of volume. But when it comes to quality, it is a different story. Malawian coffee is sweet, smooth, and floral, with notes of liquorice and spices. Coffee lovers in countries such as Germany, Japan, the USA, Holland and the UK are interested in it.
In Malawi, farmers are organised into cooperatives that support them and ensure fair farmgate prices. Only arabica bushes are grown in the country, most of the fruit is processed by washing, and (interestingly) coffee trees are used by the local population to protect the soil from erosion. They plant the bushes where there is a risk of landslide.
