Abstract:
Arabica coffee (Coffea arabica L.) is an economically important crop, which is contributing the
highest of all export revenues in Ethiopia. Despite the favorable climatic conditions, variety of coffee
types and long history of its production in Ethiopia, quality of coffee is poor due to lack of adequate
information on the effect of pre- and post-harvest practices and handling techniques on coffee quality.
Therefore, this study was conducted with the objectives of assessing Quality profile and Effect of
drying materials of dry processing of Arabica coffee and to assess the impact of drying materials
on the quality of dry processed Arabica coffee and to determine the quality profile of landrace
coffee from five selected areas of Northern Ethiopia. For field survey, 300 small-scale farmers were
purposefully selected following sample size determination procedures of probability proportional size
technique and 50 coffee traders were also purposefully selected from the five selected woredas’ and
interviewed from November to December 2012. The data collected from the field survey were analyzed
by employing the statistical procedures of SPSS version 16.0. On the other hand a total of 75coffee
samples(15from five selected coffee growing woredas of werababoo, Habru, Raya-Azebo, Kolatemben
and Tselemti in Northern Ethiopia) were prepared for the laboratory analysis (organoleptic and bean
physical quality characteristics) at Ethiopia Commodity Exchange(ECX) of Addis Ababa. The
laboratory experiment was arranged in factorial combination with five different drying materials
(mesh wire, wooden raised bed , bamboo raised bed, cement floor and soil floor) in RCBD design in
three replications and organoleptic quality attributes were assessed by trained coffee panels. The
laboratory data analysis was computed by using general linear model (GLM) procedures of SAS
version 9.2. As a result from the survey analysis, the demographic information in those areas was
productive age ranged from 30-50 years old, 70% Male headed and about 62% of the total respondent
was illiterate. And about 28.7% had owned a coffee farm less than 0.25ha while 30% and 18.7% had
owned a coffee farm of the area between 0.25-0.5 ha. Whereas in Pre-harvest practices 65.3% of the
coffee planted was aged without replacing old plant and no use of compost or manure application on
the farm, no intercropping, poor harvesting system, poor mechanism of quality coffee identification,
no means of moisture content determination and marketing currently replacing by chat, were some of
the most problems for the study areas. And the result of the current experiment showed that the raised
bed of mesh wire, Bamboo and wood materials were good drying materials for coffee and relatively
the maximum grade was recorded grade 2 from Raya-Azebo, Habru and Werababoo woredas’ bulked
coffee (Landraces) respectively, however the least grade was recorded grade 4. And mesh wirehad got
high net income, while Raised bed of Bamboo and Wood with sack mat was medium net income than
cement and soil floor. The correlation analysis also indicated that almost all were strong positive
correlated and highly significant (p<0.01) relationship of the quality attributes, but negative
correlated with grade. Therefore Extension intervention could be the best approach to create
awareness, Morphological and molecular characterization of the landraces garden coffee growing in
those areas is important and an urgent issue, feasibility of semi-washed coffee processing could be
tested to further improve the coffee quality and Research geared towards developing or adapting
improved coffee varieties from similar agro-ecologies in Ethiopia or other coffee producing countries
could be a means to promote better production of coffee in the studied target areas would be make
towards maintaining typical coffee quality profile and competence in the international coffee market