Tadaaki Miyagi runs Burikina, an organic coffee farm in Nago, a city on the Motobu Peninsula that juts out from the northwest corner of Okinawa Prefecture’s main island. After he registered his lot with the Coffee Quality Institute (CQI) two years ago, he realized he manages the world’s smallest coffee farm.
Miyagi, who hails from the prefectural capital of Naha, grows around 300 coffee trees in a field dotted with shikuwasa citrus trees, shade-giving banana trees and wind-buffering dracaena plants. He is one of only a handful of producers in Japan whose coffee beans have earned the coveted Q Grade, a credential awarded by the CQI.
“Ada Farm in the town of Kunigami achieved the first Q Grade, followed by myself and Shirase Coffee Farm in Kumejima,” he says. “Nobody had expected that specialty grade coffee could be produced in Okinawa because of our region’s low elevation and high latitude, but we proved it was possible.”
