coffeesterTHE COFFEE ENCYCLOPEDIA

Origin · Yemen

Bani Matar

Sana'a Governorate

Ancient terraced highlands west of Sana'a producing wild, winey, deeply fruited dry-processed heirloom coffee.

Bani Matar, a district of terraced mountains west of the Yemeni capital Sana'a, is part of one of the oldest commercial coffee landscapes on earth — Yemen was the first place coffee was cultivated and traded at scale, giving its name to the port of Mokha from the 15th century onward. Farmers grow ancient, diverse landraces on hand-built stone terraces between roughly 1,800 and 2,400 metres, drying cherry naturally on rooftops in an arid climate with little irrigation. The coffees are intense and wild: winey, spiced, with dried fruit, cocoa, and a heavy body that defined the historic 'Mocha' flavour. Bani Matar represents both extraordinary heritage and the fragility of coffee farming amid Yemen's difficult conditions.

Climate

Arid, high-altitude mountain climate relying on terracing and minimal water.

Soil

Rocky, mineral terraced mountain soils.

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Varietals grown here

Last updated: June 13, 2026