Ethiopia is easy to romanticize.
For many coffee drinkers, Ethiopia carries an immediate image: floral aroma, citrus brightness, tea-like finish, and a sense of origin depth. These words are not wrong, but they are not enough.
A sourcing note should be more careful than a tasting poster.
When we write about Ethiopian coffees inside Wayfarer Cafe, we try to avoid treating the country name as a single flavor. Ethiopia is not one cup. Even one well-known region can contain many producers, washing stations, processes, crop years, and lot qualities.
That is why an origin file needs a specific name.
Washing station as a reference point
For many Ethiopian coffees, the washing station is an important reference in the sourcing conversation.
It helps locate the coffee in a more concrete way than country or region alone. It also allows buyers to understand that the coffee is part of a collection, delivery, processing, and export path.
In the Wayfarer system, names like Gedeb Wuri and Yirgacheffe Chelbesa are treated as origin files, not as generic country labels.
This does not mean every detail is fixed forever. It means the conversation starts from a clearer place.
Floral does not mean vague
Floral language can easily become too soft.
A café menu may say jasmine, bergamot, lemon, peach, or black tea. These notes may help drinkers imagine the cup, but a sourcing conversation needs to go further.
Is the coffee washed or natural?
Is the acidity clean or sharp?
Is the finish tea-like or sugary?
Is the coffee suitable for filter presentation, sample evaluation, or green coffee discussion?
These questions help move from impression to use.
A sample is still necessary
No origin description can replace a sample.
The purpose of the origin note is not to guarantee a cup in advance. It is to frame the discussion before sampling.
If a café wants a floral Ethiopian profile, the next step is not to click a shopping cart. The next step is to request a sample, compare the cup, and understand whether the profile fits the menu, equipment, customer base, and price position.
This is why Ethiopian coffees in Wayfarer Cafe may appear both as Origin Selections and as Green Coffee Lots.
The same origin background may support different business conversations.
Careful language is part of sourcing
Good sourcing language should leave room for confirmation.
Crop year, specific lot, supplier access, shipping route, roast profile, and sample status can change. A responsible catalogue should not pretend that all of these are fixed when they are still under discussion.
That is not weakness. It is discipline.
Ethiopian coffee can be beautiful. But for Wayfarer Cafe, beauty has to be recorded, sampled, and discussed before it becomes supply.

