Trojan Horse - Washed Uganda The Coffee Yards
Trojan Horse - Washed Uganda The Coffee Yards
Couldn't load pickup availability
Share
Shipping & Fulfillment
Shipping & Fulfillment
Orders are typically shipped out within 3 business days of placement. We use USPS and UPS to deliver orders. You will be receiving an email with tracking info once your order has shipped.

- Country - Uganda
- Lot - The Coffee Yards, Elgon Reserve Washed
- Producer (Group) - The Coffee Yards and 4 community stations buying from ~ 300 registered farmers
- Region - Mt. Elgon
- Production Bags - 33
- Altitude - 1400 - 2000 m.a.s.l.
- Varietals - SL14, SL28, Nyasaland
- Processing - Select washed lot: pulped on-farm and pre-fermented in water, with fermentation managed and extended at the yard before drip drying and gradual drying on beds and tarps.
- Importer - Crop to Cup
The Coffee Yards
Norman Mukuru started his career as an agronomist in his home region of Kasese, near Uganda's western border. He pursued further education as an agronomical engineer and applied his attention to coffee in the area. One of the largest exporters in the region-Great Lakes-recruited him to set up their collection and processing operations, which he did so successfully that they asked him to travel east, to Mt. Elgon, to do it again there.
This time, though, Norman wanted to set up something for himself, and so he founded The Coffee Yards-a central processing plant outside of Mbale town where parchment and cherry from up the mountain could come for better drying and professional processing. He originally opened this up as a service for farmers who would rent space in the yards, but as security concerns emerged, and as Norman perceived greater opportunity for processing efficiency, standardization, and payment acceleration, Norman pivoted toward purchasing all cherry himself.
When Great Lakes collapsed, Norman was left with The Coffee Yards and all of its up-mountain networks, but lacked the financing to continue purchasing and operations. Crop to Cup is lucky and honored to have met Norman at a time in his career when he was open to applying his attention to specialty exports, and we hope to remain a key partner has his business grows and becomes more and more sustainable.
Coffee in Uganda
Uganda, the self-proclaimed 'pearl of Africa, is where Crop to Cup began. It will always be close to our hearts, and coffee has long been central to its economy. When we began working here in 2007, production was about 80% Robusta and 20% Arabica-a ratio that still holds today, underscoring the country's volume-driven export landscape. Robusta dominates the central lowlands, while Arabica thrives in two regions: Mt. Elgon on the eastern border with Kenya, and the Rwenzoris in the southwest.
Mt. Elgon is Uganda's primary Arabica zone, with elevations high enough to support both homestead-processed coffees and washing-station lots. A dozen or so exporter-owned stations line the mountain's western flank, and quality has steadily risen as investments in lot separation and farmer extension services take hold. Most growers here manage 20-200 trees, with coffee as their only access to a cash economy. While small quantities from each household can make consistency elusive, that variability often yields cups with distinctive character. Alongside the mid-80s lots defined by medium body and assertive citrus, we've also seen standouts scoring in the high 80s, with ripe stone fruit brightness and higher complexity profiles.
The Rwenzoris-Uganda's "mountains of the moon"-form the country's secondary Arabica region along the Congolese border. Decades of conflict left fractured communities, but NGO engagement over the past ten years has built well-trained cooperatives producing clean, certified coffees. Flavor profiles are similar to Mt. Elgon: medium-bodied, citrus-forward cups that reflect both the altitude and the soil.
At lower elevations in the southwest, producers cultivate "DrUgArs" (Dried Ugandan Arabica), shorthand for natural-process lots that were once relegated to blends. Until recently, quality was overlooked and prices low, but with training in floating and raised-bed drying, "specialty Drugars" have emerged: full-bodied, stewed fruit profiles that are now appearing on bar as single-origin offerings. Maxing out around ~1,500 meters, washed processing would struggle to command premiums-but by differentiating through naturals, farmers here have carved out a viable niche in specialty, with quality improvements matched by higher prices at the farmgate.