The Coffee That Refused to Move
The coffee trees in El Salvador’s Apaneca-Ilamatepec mountains stand as living fossils, their roots gripping volcanic soil that has remained remarkably unchanged for generations. While neighboring countries swept away their old Bourbon trees in favor of higher-yielding hybrids, El Salvador’s farmers maintained a stubborn fidelity to the past. The result is a coffee that tastes different from anything grown in the rest of Central America today.
The Bourbon varietal arrived in El Salvador in the early 1800s, brought from the island of Bourbon (now Réunion) off the coast of Madagascar. It was the foundation of Central American coffee for decades, prized for its balanced cup and elegant flavor profile. But by the 1960s and 70s, agricultural modernization swept through the region. El Salvador didn’t follow — the civil war that raged from 1979 to 1992 froze agricultural development in its tracks.
“The war didn’t just destroy buildings and infrastructure,” explains Carlos Méndez, a third-generation coffee producer in the Apaneca region. “It stopped time. While our neighbors were experimenting with new varieties and processing methods, we were focused on simply keeping our farms alive.”
This accidental preservation created something unique. Today, El Salvador maintains the highest percentage of Bourbon trees in Central America — approximately 40% of its coffee production still comes from this classic varietal. In Guatemala, that figure has fallen below 5%.
The Geography of Resistance
El Salvador’s coffee regions tell the story of a country that found its identity in elevation and volcanic soil. The Apaneca-Ilamatepec range in the west forms the backbone of the country’s best coffee, reaching heights of 1,500 meters. El Bálsamo-Quezaltepec near San Salvador sits at 900 to 1,400 meters, producing more balanced profiles with chocolate notes. The Alotepec-Metapán region in the north is where the most innovation is happening, with old Bourbon trees over 50 years old expressing their best potential through modern techniques.
The Bourbon Legacy
The Bourbon varietal’s persistence in El Salvador has created a coffee that stands apart from its Central American neighbors. The classic Bourbon profile — balanced, sweet, with a velvety body and chocolate-nut finish — remains the standard.
The Pacas varietal, discovered as a natural mutation of Bourbon in 1949, has become something of a national treasure. Named after the farm where it was found, Pacas produces coffee with a slightly more complex profile, often showing notes of citrus and stone fruit alongside the traditional chocolate character. The Pacamara, a cross between Pacas and the giant Maragogype variety, represents another chapter in El Salvador’s coffee story — exceptional large beans with distinctive sweetness and body.
The Future in the Old Trees
As climate change begins to affect coffee production worldwide, El Salvador’s commitment to traditional varietals takes on new significance. The Bourbon trees that have survived for generations may hold genetic keys to adapting to changing conditions. Coffee researchers are beginning to study these old varieties more systematically, looking for traits that could be valuable in breeding programs aimed at climate adaptation.
For roasters and consumers, El Salvador’s coffee represents a connection to a time when coffee was grown for flavor rather than volume. The story of El Salvador’s coffee is ultimately a story of resistance — not just to modernization, but to the forces that would have erased a piece of agricultural history.