SL28 & SL34 Coffee Guide: Kenyan Varieties, Bright Acidity, Blackcurrant

By Lorenzo · Published April 20, 2026 · Silo S2 — Coffee Varieties · Reading time: 11 min

If you've ever tasted a great Kenyan coffee and been struck by that vivid burst of blackcurrant, that juicy grapefruit zing, that full body that seems to just coat your palate — you've almost certainly been tasting SL28 or SL34. These two varieties, selected in Kenya in the 1930s by the Scott Agricultural Laboratories, are the genetic backbone of Kenyan specialty coffee and among the most distinctive expressions of cultivated arabica in the world. This is your guide to understanding what makes them special, different from each other, and why "Kenyan specialty" and "SL28/SL34" have become nearly synonymous.

Quick overview — SL28 and SL34: Kenyan selections from the Scott Laboratories (1930s). SL28: intense phosphoric acidity, blackcurrant, grapefruit. SL34: similar profile but softer, slightly more chocolate. Both varieties found almost exclusively in Kenya. Relative price: high to very high.

The Scott Laboratories: Quality Selection in Colonial Kenya

In the 1920s and 1930s, the British colonial administration in Kenya undertook a systematic variety selection program to improve productivity and disease resistance while maintaining cup quality — an unusual requirement for the era, when yield typically trumped all else. The Scott Agricultural Laboratories (giving us the "SL" prefix) in Kikuyu, near Nairobi, led this work and produced several dozen numbered selections. Among them, SL28 and SL34 quickly stood out for their exceptional cup profiles.

SL28 was selected in 1931 from a single plant identified in the Tanganyika (now Tanzania) region. Its precise genetic origin is still debated: it may descend from a drought-resistant variety linked to Yemeni or Sumatran arabica. What's certain is that SL28 shows greater drought tolerance than Typica or Bourbon — a valuable advantage in Kenya's semi-arid regions.

SL34 is a separate selection from Loresho Estate (near Nairobi), derived from a broad-leaved plant identified as French Mission Bourbon — a Bourbon introduced by French missionaries. Its genetic profile is closer to Bourbon than SL28, which shows in a slightly different cup character.

SL28 vs. SL34: What's the Difference?

Both varieties share the same Kenyan terroir and belong to the same aromatic family, but they are not identical:

In practice, many Kenyan coffees are a blend of both varieties within a single plot, harvested and processed together. Micro-lots separating pure SL28 and pure SL34 do exist, but remain the exception.

What Is Phosphoric Acidity? A Closer Look

The term "phosphoric acidity" appears frequently in SL28 descriptions and deserves explanation. Phosphoric acid is naturally present in arabica coffee. In most varieties, it's present in modest quantities and its taste role is masked by other acids (malic, citric, acetic). In SL28, its relative concentration is higher, expressing a distinctive acidity: bright, clean, non-pointed, that "wells up" in the mid-palate rather than hitting on the attack. Some tasters compare it to the acidity of pomegranate juice or gooseberry. This characteristic gives SL28 coffees a unique "juiciness" and exceptional aromatic persistence.

Growing Regions in Kenya

SL28 and SL34 are grown almost exclusively in Kenya, making their aromatic profile a genuine geographical-varietal signature:

Attempts to grow SL28 and SL34 outside Kenya (notably in Costa Rica, Colombia and Tanzania) have been made by curious roasters and producers. Results show the profile varies considerably outside its native terroir: the characteristic Kenyan "juice" appears strongly linked to the combination of variety × Kenyan volcanic soil × double-fermentation washed processing.

The "Kenya Process": Double Fermentation and Its Impact

Part of the sensory identity of Kenyan SL28/SL34 coffees comes from a processing method specific to Kenya: double soaking in water (also called "double-soaked washed"). After pulping, the beans ferment dry for about 24 hours, then are submerged in clean water for a second 12–24 hour fermentation. This process more completely breaks down the mucilage and appears to amplify the clarity and intensity of phosphoric acidity in the cup. Not every Kenyan washing station uses this method, but it remains the reference standard for specialty micro-lots.

Why SL28 and SL34 Stay in Kenya

Unlike Typica or Bourbon, which spread worldwide, SL28 and SL34 remain practically confined to Kenya. A few reasons:

This de facto geographic exclusivity is one reason why "Kenyan specialty coffee" and "SL28/SL34" became nearly synonymous internationally.

Variety Comparison: SL28, SL34 and Bright Acidity Varieties

Variety Origin Dominant Profile Acidity (type) Body Characteristic Notes Relative Price
SL28 Kenya (1931 selection) Blackcurrant, grapefruit, juicy Phosphoric, very bright Full, juicy Redcurrant, dried tomato High to very high
SL34 Kenya (1935 selection) Blackberry, blueberry, dark chocolate Bright, less sharp Full Slightly softer than SL28 High
Ruiru 11 Kenya (resistant hybrid) Generic fruity, less complex Moderate Medium Less distinctive, high yield Medium
Batian Kenya (modern selection) Fruity-acidic, more balanced Bright Medium Improved disease resistance Medium to high
Bourbon (Rwanda) Bourbon introduced to Africa Red fruit, floral, chocolate Bright, malic Medium Softer profile than SL28 High
Typica (Kenya) Introduced Typica Floral, soft, stone fruit Moderate Silky Less distinctive on Kenyan terroir Medium

Price and Accessibility

Kenyan specialty SL28/SL34 sits firmly in the premium segment: €15–35/100g at specialized European roasters depending on precise origin (cooperative, washing station), vintage and cupping scores. Competition lots (Cup of Excellence Kenya, which relaunched its program) can go beyond these ranges. Seasonality is pronounced: the main Kenyan crop (main crop) reaches European markets between March and June; the smaller crop (fly crop) between October and December.

How to Brew SL28 and SL34

These varieties shine in brewing methods that foreground acidity and clarity:

SL28 is the variety that best illustrates that terroir and genetics cannot be separated: outside its Kenyan ecosystem, it doesn't produce the same coffee. It's a humbling lesson for anyone who thinks a variety alone is enough to make a great cup.

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