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Kenya Coffee School & Barista Mtaani: Building Africa’s Coffee Future

Alfred Gitau Mwaura, Founder & Executive Secretary General of Kenya Coffee School and Founder of Barista Mtaani, shares insights into the vision, growth, and impact of Kenya’s leading specialty coffee training institution.

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How did Kenya Coffee School and Barista Mtaani come about?

Around the early 2010s, Kenya’s coffee industry was globally respected for quality but locally disconnected from value addition. While Kenya produced some of the world’s finest specialty coffee, many young people lacked structured training opportunities to enter the value chain beyond farming.

Recognizing this gap, Alfred Gitau Mwaura founded Kenya Coffee School to professionalize barista training, specialty coffee education, and beverage innovation in Kenya.

Soon after, Barista Mtaani was launched as a grassroots movement—bringing coffee skills directly into communities, estates, and informal settlements. The idea was simple yet transformative:

  • Make coffee education accessible.
  • Turn youth into skilled professionals.
  • Connect local talent to global standards.

Kenya Coffee School was built as a structured academic institution, while Barista Mtaani became the outreach and empowerment arm — ensuring coffee knowledge reaches the “mtaa” (community level).

Today, the institution has trained thousands of students across barista skills, coffee roasting, sensory analysis, mixology, and coffee entrepreneurship.


How does Kenya Coffee School support farmers and enhance coffee production?

Kenya Coffee School supports the coffee ecosystem from farm to cup — but with a strong focus on value addition and skills development.

Rather than pushing inputs, the school emphasizes:

  • Coffee chemistry and fermentation science
  • Sensory analysis and cupping
  • Roast profiling and quality control
  • Business skills and café entrepreneurship
  • Sustainable sourcing and traceability

The institution bridges the gap between producers and the market by training:

  • Professional baristas
  • Café owners
  • Coffee exporters
  • Quality control specialists
  • Youth entrepreneurs

By strengthening skills at the consumption and processing level, farmers benefit from a more knowledgeable domestic market that understands quality, grading, and specialty premiums.

Beyond coffee skills, Kenya Coffee School integrates:

  • Youth empowerment programs
  • Women’s economic participation initiatives
  • Community-based entrepreneurship
  • Financial literacy and cooperative development

The goal is not just better coffee — but stronger coffee communities.


How do initiatives change from location to location?

Every county in Kenya presents unique social and economic dynamics.

What works in Thika may differ from Nairobi, Kisumu, or Nyeri.

Kenya Coffee School tailors its programs based on:

  • Local employment gaps
  • Market access opportunities
  • Youth demographics
  • Coffee production proximity

Barista Mtaani programs, for example, focus heavily on grassroots employability — short, intensive training sessions that allow immediate income generation.

Meanwhile, the main campus programs dive deeper into specialty certification, advanced brewing science, and international coffee standards.

The philosophy is clear:

Sustainability is not one-size-fits-all.
Coffee education must be contextual, inclusive, and practical.


How does Kenya Coffee School fit into the coffee supply chain?

Kenya Coffee School operates as a neutral but strategic skills engine within the supply chain.

It does not compete with farmers, cooperatives, or exporters — it strengthens them by building human capital.

The institution collaborates with:

  • Coffee cooperatives
  • Café brands
  • Hospitality institutions
  • Exporters and roasters
  • Development partners

The presence of a strong skills institution ensures that Kenya’s coffee value chain retains more value locally.

True sustainability in coffee requires:

  • Market access
  • Skills development
  • Youth inclusion
  • Gender equity
  • Entrepreneurial capacity

Kenya Coffee School and Barista Mtaani sit at the intersection of all five.


Impact Snapshot

  • Thousands of certified baristas trained
  • Hundreds of café startups supported
  • Youth employment pathways created
  • Women-led coffee enterprises strengthened
  • Specialty coffee awareness expanded locally and internationally

Kenya Coffee School is not just a training institution.
It is a movement to reposition Kenya from being known only for exporting green coffee to becoming a global hub for specialty coffee excellence.

From farm to cup.
From mtaa to global markets.
From potential to profession.

Kenya Coffee School & Barista Mtaani — Brewing Africa’s Future.

Kenya Coffee School
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