Pacamara Coffee Guide: Large Size, Bright Acidity, El Salvador and Beyond

By Lorenzo · Published April 20, 2026 · Silo S2 — Coffee Varieties · Reading time: 10 min

Most coffee variety discoveries are a matter of recognizing something good that already existed. Pacamara is different: it was deliberately invented. A hybrid created in a Salvadoran research lab in 1958, it crossed two very different parents — one compact and flavorful, one enormous and underwhelming — and produced something that surpassed them both. Today, Pacamara beans are among the most immediately recognizable in specialty coffee (they are genuinely huge), and in the right growing conditions, they deliver a cup that is as striking in the glass as it is visually impressive in the roasting bag.

Quick overview — Pacamara: intentional hybrid of Pacas (Bourbon mutation) × Maragogipe (giant Typica mutation), created in El Salvador in 1958. Very large to giant beans. Cup profile: brilliant acidity, floral, noble herbal notes, complex fruit. Low yield. Relative price: high to very high in specialty.

The Parents: Pacas and Maragogipe

To understand Pacamara, you need to meet its parents:

The 1958 crossing by El Salvador's Instituto Salvadoreño de Investigaciones del Café (ISIC) produced a variety that inherited Pacas's relatively compact habit and Maragogipe's giant beans — but in the right altitude and terroir conditions, developed an aromatic complexity exceeding either parent.

Agronomic Character: Impressive but Challenging

Pacamara is what you might call an "impressive but high-maintenance" variety:

What Pacamara Tastes Like

Pacamara's cup profile is one of the most polarizing in arabica: some tasters find it exceptionally complex and elegant; others find it too herbal or vegetal. This polarity is partly due to the high intra-varietal variability mentioned above, and partly to the effect of altitude and processing.

In its best expressions (high altitude, selective picking, careful processing):

El Salvador: Pacamara's Home

El Salvador is the country most associated with Pacamara, and for good reason: it's where the variety was created, and where it has developed the most coherent production base. The regions of Santa Ana (Apaneca-Ilamatepec), Ahuachapán and Chalatenango produce Pacamara lots that regularly appear in the Cup of Excellence El Salvador rankings.

Salvadoran coffee culture was devastated by the civil war (1979–1992) and by the coffee leaf rust epidemic (2012–2015), but Pacamara has become a vehicle for national production recovery. Many producers who had uprooted disease-sensitive plants replanted with Pacamara — an agronomically risky bet that paid off commercially for those who achieved specialty quality.

Pacamara Beyond El Salvador

Pacamara has gradually spread to other Central American countries and beyond:

Pacamara and Experimental Processing

The large bean size of Pacamara makes it particularly adaptable to post-harvest processing methods that leverage cherry sugars and mucilage:

Variety Comparison: Pacamara and Distinctive Bean Varieties

Variety Bean Size Dominant Profile Acidity Body Intra-varietal Variability Relative Price
Pacamara Very large to giant Brilliant acidity, floral, noble herbal Brilliant, complex Full to creamy High High to very high
Maragogipe Giant Soft, low acidity, light Low Light High Medium to high (rarity)
Pacas Small to medium Fruity-sweet, Bourbon-like Bright Medium Moderate Medium
Bourbon (El Salvador) Medium Brown sugar, red fruit, chocolate Bright Medium to full Low High
Geisha Long and narrow Jasmine, bergamot, peach Fine, tea-like Very light Moderate Very high
Typica Medium to large Floral, stone fruit, clean sweet Moderate Silky Low High

Price and Market Positioning

Specialty Pacamara typically ranges from €18–35/100g at specialized European roasters for well-traceable El Salvador or Guatemala origins. Competition lots (Cup of Excellence El Salvador, high cupping scores) can go beyond €40–60/100g. Pacamara's high intra-varietal variability means traceability to the plot or lot level is even more important than for other varieties: two Pacamara from the same country can be very different coffees.

How to Brew Pacamara

Pacamara's giant bean size requires a few practical and tasting adjustments:

Pacamara is the variety that best illustrates how controlled hybridization can produce something greater than its parents: neither Pacas nor Maragogipe alone reaches the aromatic complexity that Pacamara deploys in its best high-altitude Salvadoran expressions.

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