
St Helena Coffee by Solomon & Co. – Ripe coffee cherries at the Bamboo Hedge Plantation in Sandy Bay.
Cultivating A Centuries Old Original | Sharon Henry
St Helena coffee begins life a world away from the coffee houses of Starbucks and trendy speciality outlets where it is sold.
“The only thing I don’t like about coffee is drinking it!” laughs a chief picker at the Bamboo Hedge coffee plantation on St Helena – which just so happens to supply of one of the world’s most prized and expensive coffee beans. “I’m a tea drinker myself,” she shrugs. This declaration might cause some coffee aficionados to choke on their morning brew.
Tracey Duncan plucks ruby red ‘cherries’ (ripe fruit) and drops them into a hessian bag. “I like everything else about it,” she adds, “the whole process of picking, pulping, drying, hulling, sorting…everything.
“It’s the principle of it as well; this is one thing the island exports, that makes its own money for the island,” she explains.
Napoleon’s Nod Of Approval to St Helena Coffee

Coffee trees growing in the Wrangham’s Plantation in Sandy Bay. Wrangham’s itself can be seen through the trees on the left.
St Helena Coffee by Solomon & Co.
We’re stood on the slopes of Sandy Bay which is part of an extinct volcano, surrounded by coffee trees dripping with cherries of varying ripeness, ready for hand picking. It’s intense work especially in the mid-morning sun and Tracey picks an average of 10 kilos a day.
St Helena coffee was made fashionable in the 1800s by Napoleon who supposedly uttered, “The only good thing to come of St Helena is the coffee.” Of course that was just the opinion of a captive person, but after a revival in the last seven years, coffee is once again a good thing ‘coming of’ St Helena.
Spilling The Beans
Solomon & Company took over the Bamboo Hedge plantation in 2010 and have put St Helena coffee back on the world market, albeit in small quantities.

Coffee cherries ready for picking.
St Helena Coffee by Solomon & Co.

A bucket full of freshly picked coffee cherries from the Bamboo Hedge plantation in Sandy Bay.
St Helena Coffee by Solomon & Co.
Of the five tonne (on average) that Tracey and her work mates pick in a season, approximately one will end up being exported as the original picked weight is hugely reduced through processing.
Last year coffee chain, Starbucks hit the news cycle for selling St Helena coffee, their most expensive to date, and it was a hit.
What makes St Helena coffee so special, besides Napoleon and its ‘delectable’ taste, is the Green Tipped Bourbon Arabica seed imported in 1733 from Mocha, Yemen, which is still being cultivated today, 284 years on, unspoilt.
The Girl Who Don’t Drink Coffee

The coffee picking crew at the Bamboo Hedge Plantation in Sandy Bay.
St Helena Coffee by Solomon & Co.
“We have little competitions, who can pick the most, for fun,” smiles Tracey. “I’m very competitive so I’m always the one,” even though she doesn’t drink the stuff!
However, that doesn’t affect the meticulous care put into processing St Helena coffee by the small team who take pride in turning those red cherries into green (unroasted) coffee beans, and sending them out into the ‘outside world.’
To achieve optimum quality the beans go through a very specific process. These are the nine stages of producing green coffee beans here on St Helena.
1. Harvesting

Tracey Duncan picking coffee at Solomon’s, Bamboo Hedge Plantation in Sandy Bay.
St Helena Coffee by Solomon & Co.
It takes nine months for the coffee bean to grow which is handpicked at the peak of ripening when the cherries are ruby red. There is a short window of a week before the fruit over ripens and deteriorates. If picked green or too early it will affect the taste. Extra hands are hired during the harvesting period between November and January and each picker collects between 5-10 kilos a day. An average of five tonne is picked in a season.
2. Pulping

Pulping of the coffee beans underway.
St Helena Coffee by Solomon & Co.
Immediately after picking, the cherries are put through the pulping machine. Like a magic act they go in red and come out white. The pulper removes the red skins and underlying fleshy fruit to reveal the white parchment of the bean inside. The discarded red skins are used for composting. Much of the crop’s weight is lost during this process.
3. Washing

The washing process involves a 5 day soak in the bath.
St Helena Coffee by Solomon & Co.
A row of domestic baths are lined along a terrace where the pulped beans are placed to soak and wash for five days, continually changing the water each day. This wet processing dissolves the slimy fruit coating called mucilage. Mucilage is natural sugars and alcohols that help to develop the sweetness, acidity and flavour in the coffee beans.
4. Drying

After washing the coffee beans is complete, this is the drying process that follows.
St Helena Coffee by Solomon & Co.
Washed beans are thinly layered in gauze trays and sun dried in a drying shed until they reach a specific moisture content of 11%. When dry the white parchment skin covering the beans becomes crumbly and easy to rub off.
5. Resting Period

St Helena Coffee beans drying in Sandy Bay.
St Helena Coffee by Solomon & Co.
The beans are then moved off site and placed in storage at Half Tree Hollow for 6-8 weeks, kept at a temperature of around 20C with 50% humidity. Resting allows the flavour of the beans to mature and develop.
6. Hulling

Hulling of the coffee beans taking place at ANRD, Scotland on St Helena.
St Helena Coffee by Solomon & Co.

Coffee workers busy hulling and polishing the beans at ANRD, Scotland.
St Helena Coffee by Solomon & Co.
Hulling is done at ANRD, Scotland, where an old hulling machine removes the dry white parchment from the beans. An electric fan blows the discarded, confetti-like parchment into a corner. This will be used for composting. To ensure the moisture content is retained, the beans are put through the machine no more than three times. It takes about two weeks to process a tonne.
7. Polishing

Polishing of the coffee beans.
St Helena Coffee by Solomon & Co.

Polished coffee beans.
St Helena Coffee by Solomon & Co.
Hulled beans are immediately processed through a Smout polishing machine which removes the silver skin and gives a special polish to the final green bean. The clean, polished beans are then kept in storage at a temperature of around 20C with a humidity of 50% ready for sorting.
8. Sorting

The coffee bean sorting machine in operation in Half Tree Hollow.
St Helena Coffee by Solomon & Co.

A handful of pea beans already sorted.
St Helena Coffee by Solomon & Co.
Sorting is done at Half Tree Hollow and is the most tedious stage of the process. The beans are graded in sizes and pea beans are separated from half beans. Damaged ones are kept aside. The first round of sorting is done by a large machine with a multi-holed cylinder. Human hands and eyes do the other rounds. Before the machine was purchased, 20 people manually carried out this sorting stage; the number is now reduced to four. Around four 20kg bags are completed in a day.

Working with the sorting trays.
St Helena Coffee by Solomon & Co.

After the machine has finished the final rounds of sorting is done by hand.
St Helena Coffee by Solomon & Co.
9. Bagging

St Helena Coffee beans produced Solomon & Company, getting bagged and ready for export.
St Helena Coffee by Solomon & Co.
The beans are bagged in 20kg hessian sacks (gunny bags as we call them) ready for export. On average up to one tonne is exported with 1.6 tonne being the largest output so far. A vast reduction to the five tonne (average) of original picked weight. The difference is lost through the process of producing green coffee beans.
Quick Coffee Shots

Working with the sorting trays.
St Helena Coffee by Solomon & Co.
Solomon & Company grow the island’s largest coffee crop from the Bamboo Hedge and Wrangham’s plantations which total over 9 acres containing 6,000 trees.
Solomon’s green (unroasted) coffee is exported wholesale to a UK partner. Sea Island Coffee is one of the wholesale customers.
The Green Tipped Bourbon Arabica coffee grown on St Helena is the only one of its kind commercially farmed today.
The 2015 St Helena coffee crop was distributed wholesale to UK, Belgium, Romania, USA, Japan and Germany through the UK distributor.
St Helena coffee is locally available on the island, grown and roasted on a small scale by other companies.
Coffee is typically grown within 1,000 miles of the equator between the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn, also known as the ‘coffee belt.’
There are two main commercial types of coffee bean – Robusta and Arabica. Robusta coffee grows best at lower altitudes whereas Arabica is better suited to higher altitudes.
Coffee is the world’s most popular drink with around two billion cups being consumed every day.
Coffee is the second largest export in the world after oil (in dollar value).
Coffee has one of the most recognisable smells in the world.
Coffee from the Yemen was originally called ‘kahwe.’

Freshly picked coffee cherries.
St Helena Coffee by Solomon & Co.
Great article, my wife is not human until she gets her morning cup of coffee.
Hmmm…I have a husband who’s like that. (Sharon here) 🙂
My wife isn’t human…..
We’re guessing she’s SUPER human Roland! 🙂
She’s a saint….of the ethereal kind…
I have excellent skills as far as coffee processing, harvesting and cultivating are concerned.
Can I get a job at the plantation.
I am a coffee lover, great article, our prices in South Africa at Woollies Food outlets is about R140 for 250G packs for a branded roasted Arabica (imported and processed from Italy) which is a high end price and therefore I doubt that the reported U$80 ex Starbucks will fly here at 8 times the price for home consumption….I would still like to try a mug of St.Helena though …at some stage…..
Yes – St Helena coffee is really rather expensive! The only other way is to visit and have a mug at the local St Helena Coffee Shop – although the flight here far exceeds even Starbucks prices. 🙂
Can anyone tell me where I can purchase some St.Helena coffee beans in South Africa..?
We don’t know of a place especially, Roland, but we’ve passed on your inquiry to Solomon’s here on the island and they should be contacting you soon with some options.
Cheers 🙂
Thanks…
Dear Ladys and Gentleman,
I have a QUESTION concerning St. HELENA COFFEE. WOULD IT BE POSSIBLE FOR A SMALL COMPANY TO IMPORT HELENA COFFEE FROM YOU TO GERMANY? IF SO, what would be the Price for 2KG?
Thank you for your Time. WOULD Love to hear from you.
Kind regards,
Felix Malzahn
Great post Darren&sharon ,love readIng your articles. Very interestIng to see all the work thaT goes into it to make it work
Thanks David – doing this blog is really helping us to discover our island more. who knew all the work and effort that went into making coffee? We thought you just add water! 🙂
I loved the coffee when I was on St Helena,where can I buy it in the U K please
Sorry for the delay in our reply Brenda. If available St Helena coffee can be bought from Sea Island Coffee (link above) and harrods. You’ll probably have to pay a pretty penny we’d expect! 🙂
Hi Brenda,
It’s much cheaper from Cardews of Oxford… £18.75 for 125g as opposed to Sea Island charging £45 for 125g.
The difference is that Cardews don’t specify which plantation it’s from (Bamboo Hedge or Wranghams), but that doesn’t really matter as it’s still Solomon’s coffee… I believe only Solomon’s export, whereas Farm Lodge, Rosemary Gate & Beardsville.
https://cardewoxford.co.uk/collections/specialities/products/st-helena-bourbon-coffee-new-crop-2017
https://seaislandcoffee.com/collections/st-helena-roasted-coffee
Great post! Is it possible to take a tour of the plantation?
Thanks Genevieve – don’t think they do tours atm – but looking at for future possibilities.
So enjoyed reading this article and now know why it’s so expensive ..
Thanks Shirley – yes didn’t know or appreciate the long process it is to grow and make coffee until now 🙂
Another wonderful article, and personal for me as for about 100 years all my ancestors grew coffee on estates like Coffee Grove, Bamboo Grove and Bamboo Hedge. My great grandfather was born at Coffee Grove, and in 1851 GW Alexander sent coffee from Bamboo Hedge to the Great Exhibition in London where it was recieved with acclaim
It is such a pity it is totally unavailable in Cape Town where so many people have cultural and family links to St Helena. There’s a business opportunity for an enterprising Saint!
St. Helena Coffee is kind of pricey though, Starbucks was selling it at $80 per 250 gr bag. I guess the demand in Cape Town would be too limited.
Very interesting article. How many other producers are there on the island and do they all export green beans too or roast for the local market?
I think Solomons export all their crop, there are a few other growers like Bill and Jill Bolton who run the coffee shop in town and serve their own St Helena coffee.
There are 3 other coffee producers that we know off, the Boltons sell theirs locally at the coffee shop and they have exported beans to outlets like Harrods, Farm Lodge grow and make their own for hotel guests and roasted beans are available at Serena’s. All of Solomons crop is exported green – they do not have the facilities to roast. Hope this helps.
What a interesting story to read first thing in the morning over a mug of coffee, well done WTSDN.
True – it’ll make that first sip slid down with fresh appreciation 🙂
I love St Helena Coffee xx
We love it all the more especially knowing how much work goes into the making of 🙂