A roasted coffee leaf brew. Made with spices. Shared with food. The drink that defines hospitality in the coffee-growing highlands of Southwestern Ethiopia.
Before the beans are sorted for export, before the cherries are picked, before any of the processes that make coffee a global commodity — the leaves are already there.
In Tepi Town, Southwestern Ethiopia, those leaves don't go to waste. They get roasted over a fire, crushed while still warm, boiled with a generous blend of herbs and spices, and strained into cups that are served alongside food to whoever is present.
Every single household in the study used spices. Not most — all. The spices are not optional additions to a plain leaf brew. They are what Chemo is. Without them, you have something else.
This is what separates Chemo from every other coffee leaf tradition. The Maillard reaction — the same chemistry that makes toast, roasted coffee, and caramelised sugar — transforms the leaf before it ever touches water. It creates new flavour compounds that cannot come from steaming, boiling, or simply drying. 55.8% of Tepi Town households use this method as standard.
All 64 households in the documented study used aromatic herbs and spices every time they made Chemo. This is not regional variation or personal preference. The spice blend is structurally part of the drink. A plain leaf brew is Chemo without its character.
Chemo is never served alone. The research documents consistent pairing with starchy foods — injera, bread, root vegetables. This is not incidental. The food moderates the intensity of the brew. The two are understood as a unit.
Chemo is shared at communal activities, religious ceremonies, and daily social interactions. The act of making and sharing Chemo is itself a form of hospitality. You make it when someone is present. The preparation is part of the welcome.
The leaf preparation method is chosen before brewing begins. Each produces a different flavour character.
Leaves roasted over fire until golden-brown, crushed warm. Sweetest, deepest, most complex character. The dominant household method.
Gentle heat only — leaves warm but not browned. More delicate flavour. Lighter aroma. Between roasted and fresh in character.
No heat applied to leaves. Crushed and brewed directly. Brightest, most grassy character. Quickest to prepare. The Majang people's preferred method.
That is Chemo in its essential form. If you want to understand what makes it genuinely surprising — the roasting chemistry, the spice complexity, its relationship to the coffee economy — the next page has that.
What's fascinating about Chemo →