I moved from Ethiopia to Shetland - and I've brought the coffee with me

Iona NicolBBC Scotland News
News imageBBC Netsanet Sori, an Ethiopian woman with black hair who is holding her child. She is also holding a colourful bag off coffee beans. Behind her is a poster of the Ethiopian alphabet.BBC
Coffee has been an important part of Netsanet Sori's life since childhood

Shetland has plenty of honesty boxes - filled with fresh eggs, home baking and even pies.

However, the 1,000 or so residents on the island of Whalsay have recently got one offering something a little more unusual - hand-roasted Ethiopian coffee.

It has been provided by Netsanet Sori, also known as Netsi, who moved to the island in October 2025 after spending nine years in Orkney.

Raised on the family coffee farm in rural Ethiopia, she has brought a flavour of her native culture to her new home about 4,000 miles (6,400km) away.

News imageNetsanet Sori A black box placed on a green fence, containing colourful bags of coffee beans. Netsanet Sori
Hand-roasted Ethiopian coffee beans have found a home on a small Scottish island

Netsi's mother died when she was young, and she was raised by her grandmother and great-grandmother on the farm where she had to "grow up fast".

"How I was raised there, compared to here, it's completely different," she said.

Since moving to Scotland, she has used coffee to stay connected to home, importing beans from the farm where she grew up.

"It's very important to me and I will teach my children about it as well," she added.

Preparing and drinking coffee is an important daily ritual in Ethiopia with members of the community, mainly women, coming together to take part in a traditional ceremony.

"Neighbours and villagers gather once or twice in a day to share information, good news or bad news, and love," Netsi said.

"It's also about community belonging. If you make a coffee, you can't drink it alone.

"You have to share what you have and help others."

News imageA traditional Ethiopian coffee ceremony set up on a table outside. There is a coffee pot, a bag of coffee, a plate of dates, and a smoking incense burner.
Coffee ceremonies take place in Ethiopia every day

Hand roasting coffee beans is a slow, careful process.

When the beans arrive in Whalsay, they are a light green colour with a subtle, earthy aroma.

They are then cleaned and roasted in the same pot and to ensure the roast is as even as possible, the beans must be constantly shaken as they heat.

As they cook, the beans darken to a rich brown and begin to release an oil, something Netsi says is a sign of good quality coffee.

Traditionally, the beans are ground with a tool resembling a mortar and pestle but, for the sake of speed, Netsi now uses a small electric grinder.

News imageA black pan filled with pale green coffee bean sitting on top of a colourful table cloth.
Coffee beans are a pale green colour before they are roasted

While living and working in Orkney, Netsi said she roasted coffee only for herself, as well as for friends and charity events.

But after moving to Whalsay, she decided to turn her passion into a business.

"After a little research, I realised that nobody else is roasting coffee like this in Shetland," she said.

"So, I thought I can do it, and it's worked brilliantly. People seem to really like it."

News imageIngrid Sutherland Ingrid Sutherland is wearing a black winter jacket and is looking at the camera. Behind her is the sea and a small green island. On her right is a small white house. Ingrid Sutherland
Ingrid Sutherland said it was great to have an honesty box selling coffee beans

Ingrid Sutherland, who lives on the island, has been buying the coffee since she first discovered it at a Christmas fair.

"I'm a bit of a coffee drinker, I love a good cup of coffee in the morning," she said.

"Real coffee, not instant, so I was just blown away with how cool it is.

"It's local as well, so I can just nip along the road and get a bag, rather than going out of the isle.

"We have plenty of egg boxes and cake fridges here in Shetland, but we didn't have a coffee box.

"It's fantastic to have a coffee box here."