HOLIDAY Gift Box 2025
The Forge Holiday Gift Box is Back for 2025!
All gift boxes will be shipped no later than December 19th. If you need it to go out by December 11, please let us know in the notes upon checkout. If you choose to Purchase other items that you would like shipped upon order, please place a separate order for those items.
Give your friend or loved one a special unboxing experience with two special release Forge Coffees included in the Forge Holiday Gift Box 2025.
This year we are offering two types of gift boxes to fit your preferences.
The Hephaestus Premium Single Origin Holiday Gift Box
- Two top tier microlot coffees for the connoisseur in your life. Impressive complexity and flavors from Colombia and Ethiopia.
The Starlight Sips Gift Box
- Two special release coffees, one single origin from Sumatra, Indonesia, and our special limited Starlight Sips Holiday Blend. Both coffees are cozy and warm, robust and full bodied, suited to a wide range of preferences, and perfect for milks, syrups, or other "additions" that you might need to survive the Holidays.
The Gift Boxes are available whole bean, or ground for drip
- Two 8 oz. bags of Hephaestus special release, microlot coffees, or
- Starlight Sips, featuring two 10 oz. bags of warm and cozy coffees.
- Available either whole bean, or ground for drip.
HEPHAESTUS SPECIAL RELEASE MICROLOT COFFEES
Our Forge Coffee Hephaestus Premium Single Origin Holiday Gift Box ships in our signature "set your mind in motion" character mailer box, printed with exclusive original art by Jon Ventura, a local Los Angeles artist who we collaborated with for the box art. Included in each bespoke box are two festive bags of coffee, a sticker sheet, all wrapped in custom Forge Coffee tissue.
The Hephaestus Premium Single Origin Holiday Gift Box includes two 8 oz. bags of Limited Release Microlot single origin coffee. Read below for information about the amazing coffee in the gift box this year!
- Ethiopia Danche Red Honey Process
- Colombia Honey Peach Carbonic Co-Ferment by Edwin Noreña
$6.50 flat shipping per gift box.
Please note that gift boxes must be purchased separately if you are purchasing other coffees as well. One Gift Box per address per order please. Gift Boxes will ship out no later than December 19. Due to various shipping company delays and issues beyond our control, we cannot guarantee delivery of any Gift Boxes by December 25.
The Hephaestus Premium Single Origin Holiday Gift Box
•Ethiopia Danche Red Honey Process
TASTES OF:
Honeysuckle, hibiscus, marigold, orange-infused chocolate, lime, berry compote
REGION: Worka Chelchele, Gedeo, Ethiopia
PROCESSING STATION: Tracon Coffee
FARMER/GROWER: 705 Farmers/smallholders
PROCESSING: Red Honey
ALTITUDE: 1944m
Sourcing coffee from Ethiopia is a collaborative effort. Approximately 95% of the coffee trees cultivated in the country are under the husbandry of smallholder farmers, it literally takes a village to raise enough coffee cherry to export. The washing station (even in the case of minimal intervention naturals) is the local hub for most specialty coffee in the country. While farming families may dry coffee cherries on their patios or lawns to be roasted and enjoyed at home, export grade specialty coffee almost always requires centralized infrastructure.
In this case, that infrastructure—including logistics and farmer support strategies—is provided by Tracon Coffee, a 30+ year veteran organization of the coffee industry. Tracon’s interests extend from farm and washing station ownership and management to running a dedicated cupping lab and a 30,000 square foot coffee processing facility that allows them to mill and finish coffee for export on-demand.
This red honey process coffee from Danche in the Gedeo zone is a tantalizing alternative process Ethiopia that brings together the floral and citrus of washed coffee and with a voluminous in-season stone fruit juiciness. This red honey hits the sweet spot of a coffee with heaps of both fruit and florals. Red honey process sees a larger percentage of mucilage remain on the seed after de-pulping, with less frequent turning and slower drying times.
This coffee is an ode to the complexity of coffee sourcing, a celebration of collaboration, and a delicious reminder of possibilities—both traditional and experimental—still latent in the fields of one of the world’s most important producers of coffee, first in our hearts for its history and culture, its gift to the world.
•Colombia Honey Peach Carbonic Co-Ferment by Edwin Noreña
TASTES OF:
Jasmine, peach, fruit gummy, maple syrup, pink lemonade
COUNTRY: Colombia
REGION: Circasia Municipality, Quindio. Department, Colombia
PRODUCER: Edwin Noreña at Finca Campo Hermoso
VARIETIES: Caturra
PROCESSING: Co-fermented carbonic honey process
ALTITUDE: 1650m
Edwin Noreña is one of Colombia’s true processing obsessives. Known among friends as “El Alquimista” (the alchemist), Edwin has dialed in a wide repertoire of fermentation profiles, often using multiple fermentations in sequence to achieve a desired expression. This honey process microlot was made possible using two careful and distinct full cherry fermentations, the second of which was heavily fortified and infused. The result is a cup with jasmine florals and flavors of fruit gummies, watermelon jelly, maple syrup, and pink lemonade.
Quindío Department and Finca Campo Hermoso Finca Campo Hermoso is a 15-hectare farm outside of Circasia, only a few kilometers north of Quindío’s capital city, Armenia. Its owner, Edwin Noreña, is an agroindustrial engineer by trade with graduate-level studies in biotechnology. Edwin is a well-connected and highly aspirational coffee producer who focuses on pairing very specific cultivars with very specific processing methods designed to express the most surprising, memorable, and delicious coffees possible within his resources. Finca Campo Hermoso concentrates on growing a wide variety of coffee genetics, including pink bourbon, yellow bourbon, yellow caturra, bourbon sidra, gesha, and Cenicafé 1, a resistant hybrid developed by Cenicafé, Colombia’s national coffee research institute. The resulting coffees are often marketed under “El Alquimista”, Edwin’s personal brand for his microlots, which have featured in barista competitions and choosy roasters around the world.Processing, particularly the fermentation step, always interested Edwin because of its potential to transform raw coffee seeds into a remarkably unique sensory experience for coffee drinkers. A breakthrough moment for him was realizing that the sugary, residual liquid produced during the fruit fermentation (known as the must in winemaking) could be used again in subsequent fermentations to add natural sugars, and also serve as a solvent for flavoring agents. Over the years Edwin has co-fermented with chilis, ginger, brewers hops, and, in this case dehydrated fruit, to develop unique flavors in his microlots.
Peach Mossto Co-Fermented Process
Edwin’s processing for this particular lot involved two distinct whole cherry fermentations: one of fresh picked coffee cherry on its own; and a second one in which the cherry was accompanied by a carefully formulated solution of coffee cherry must (a by-product of the first fermentation) and dried fruit. Finally, the twice-fermented cherry is depulped and moved immediately to raised screen beds to dry, just like a traditional honey would be. Each stage adds a particular bit of uniqueness to the final coffee, so that by the end, the coffee is truly one of a kind in the world.
The first fermentation was with fresh coffee cherry only, carefully hand-sorted for ripeness and consistency, washed clean, and immediately moved into 2,000kg tanks to ferment for 24 hours with limited oxygen. During a fermentation like this (which we would consider an “anaerobic maceration” of the cherry) the fruit becomes dramatically softer, sweeter, and more acetic, while also leaching out a concentrated sticky, sugary runoff, the mossto or “must”, not unlike the must from freshly smashed grapes and skins in winemaking.
After this first fermentation was complete, the fermented cherry was separated from its must and moved into much smaller tanks, of 200kg capacity each. The must was then fermented on its own, along with brewer’s yeast to inoculate the process and ample quantities of dried fruit for flavoring. The fermented and flavored must was then mixed into the coffee cherry, at a ratio of 10mL per kilogram. The cherry and must were sealed into the smaller tanks to ferment again for 72 more hours.
In the final step the fermented cherry was lightly depulped leaving most of the mucilage intact (similar to what a “black” honey would be in Costa Rica) and moved directly to Edwin’s greenhouse to dry on raised screen beds, where it dried for 10 days. The fully dried coffee is then conditioned for 8 days in a warehouse, allowing for humidity to stabilize inside the seeds, and then moved into GrainPro bags for long-term storage, where it is cupped numerous times over the next few weeks for quality analysis. Edwin used a high-quality cultivar here but still a very common one: caturra is considered a “classic” Colombia genetic, having dominated much of the landscape prior to the coffee rust outbreaks of the 2010s. In other words, the arabica genetics themselves are not exotic to Colombia. Rather, the achievement is in the husbandry of the trees, the harvesting, precise blend of the different cherries, and of course the very exacting processing approach created entirely by Edwin. Some “experimental” coffees scream their processes crudely in the cup; the best ones are so symphonic as to seem effortless, both a specimen of nature and a monument to an extraordinary amount of work, study, and concentration.
STARLIGHT SIPS GIFT BOX
•SUMATRA KOPERASI GAYO GRADE 1 WET HULLED
TASTES OF:
Dark Chocolate, Pipe Tobacco, Clove, Concord Grape, Lime
COUNTRY: Indonesia
REGION: Sumatra Aceh Tengah
PRODUCER: Koperasi Coop, Wagiman Farms, Yasmin Farms
VARIETIES: Arabica Gayo 1, Arabica Gayo 2
PROCESSING: Wet Hulled, Giling Basah
ALTITUDE: 1400m
About the Coffee
Wagiman and Yasmin, two producers in the Aceh Tengah region of Sumatra, share a dedication to organic farming. Their farms, located at around 1450masl, are certified Fairtrade organic and only utilize natural fertilizers such as coffee husks and cow manure to enrich their coffee crops. This ensures soil fertility and longevity.
Ethnic Gayo farmers primarily grow Gayo 1 and Gayo 2 varietals. Although their origins are not well-documented, many believe that Gayo 1 is a strain of the Timor variety, while Gayo 2 shares similar characteristics to Timor and Bourbon. Both are commonly found throughout the highlands of this popular coffee region. The cup profile tends to be lighter-bodied than Mandheling coffees from further east.
Sumatra coffee production has a long history, extending to the 17th century when the Dutch East India Company imported coffee plants to Indonesia. Sumatra is home to a wide range of tropical flora, fauna, and microclimates. Farms on Sumatra are typically 0.5 to 2.5 hectares scattered across remote regions, connected by a network of collectors, processors, traders, and exporters to the global market.
What is Wet Hulled Coffee Processing (Giling Basah)?
The wet-hulled coffee process, locally known as Giling Basah, is the method of choice in Indonesia due to the humid climate. The wet-hulled process has become synonymous with Indonesian coffees and contributes to its unique cup profile.
In the wet-hulled process, coffee cherries are generally depulped at the farm level using hand-cranked machines. The cherries are then fermented overnight to help break down the mucilage, which is subsequently washed off. Afterwards, the coffee is quick-dried to 30-50% moisture and dried to between 11%-13% as it makes its way through the supply chain into an exporter’s mill.
Indonesian Coffee Beans
The key Indonesian green coffee regions include Aceh, North Sumatra, South Sulawesi, West Java, Bali, and Flores. Java, in particular, is renowned for its pivotal role in spreading coffee production across the Indonesian archipelago. While regions like Sulawesi and Sumatra boast a long history of coffee cultivation, Bali represents a relatively newer coffee-growing area, primarily known for its small-batch, limited-scale coffee production.
•STARLIGHT SIPS HOLIDAY BLEND
Tastes of:
Black cherry, fruit cake, hazelnut, spice, round body and carmelized sweetness
A delicious blend expertly roasted with beautiful specialty coffee from Papau New Guinea, Brazil, and Ethiopia. A cozy and warm combination for the holiday season. Enjoy in a big cup with your favorite additions, sweet or otherwise, wrapped up in a blanket, festive music playing, while wearing the most questionable sweater you can find!
Q: "Should I get Whole Bean Or Ground?"
A: Whole bean coffee will maintain freshness and quality for longer than ground coffee. Oxidation is the enemy of the flavor of coffee. Whole bean coffee simply presents less surface area to the open air over time, providing for a longer window of freshness and optimal drinkablility. We recommend only grinding what you need to prepare your drink at each sitting. We understand however, that not everyone has a grinder that may enjoy great coffee, so we have made our offers available ground for drrip in our gift box during the holidays.
Q: "What is Hephaestus?"
A: Hephaestus is the mythological Greek God of fire, blacksmithing, and metallurgy. We thought that Hephaestus was an appropriate mascot for our line of coffees that are a cut above normal specialty coffee. Hephaestus lots are always limited, purchased in small quantity, and are usually gone before you know it. These coffees display unique flavor profiles not commonly found in most coffee. When you see the Hephaestus mark on one of our coffees, you know that it will be special.