Change Please Coffee Christmas Edition

With 330,000 households in England reported to be homeless or at risk, our Christmas Edition coffee begins with impact. profits go directly toward supporting families facing homelessness this season. Celebrating our meaningful producer partnerships and the rare, festive character of Papua New Guinea coffee, this limited release offers brandy-warm notes, stone-fruit sweetness, and indulgent richness, perfect for gifting or brewing this festive season.

The Christmas Edition:

Our Christmas Edition coffee is the perfect Christmas gift: a cozy, brandy-kissed cup with stone-fruit sweetness, soft acidity, and a rich, syrupy mouthfeel that feels like a festive treat by the fire. It’s rare Papua New Guinea origin, combined with a spirit of community and sustainability, makes it a meaningful, memorable choice for both coffee lovers and casual holiday sippers.

Origin: Arufa, Papua New Guinea
Process: Natural
Processed by: Monpi Coffee
Altitude: 1520 - 1770 masl
Tasting Notes: Brandy snaps, Plums, cherries


About the Coffee Farm

Sitting in the shadow of Mount Bangeta, Papua New Guinea, the land is filled with winding waterways that help distribute much-needed volcanic nutrients throughout the soil. Traditionally, these remote regions of Papua New Guinea are difficult to traverse, meaning many producers have to carry their crop over long distances to receive factory door prices. Fortunately for communities in Arufa, the region benefits from accessible roads, providing producers with access to Monpi’s mill.

Land in PNG is still to this day conventionally owned, with plantations in Arufa managed by smallholder farmers, averaging just 2 hectares. Coffee is inter-cropped with other crops to increase soil humus, fertility and shade. Crops include plantain, bananas, yams, sweet potato, cabbage and other traditional foods.

Although a variety of other produce is grown, coffee cultivation is often the primary means of income; with other produce grown and livestock reared only for personal consumption. This makes coffee an important cash crop, as most farmers in the Jiwaka Province will grow coffee for income.