From Vilnius to the World: The Story Behind Huracán Coffee’s Historic Win

An exclusive interview with Vytautas Kratulis, founder of the World’s Best Coffee Roaster 2026

Dubai – Ali Alzakary

When Huracán Coffee was crowned World’s Best Coffee Roaster 2026 at the Global Coffee Awards in San Salvador, it was more than a victory. It marked a defining moment for the global coffee industry. For the first time, a roaster from the Baltic region reached the top, standing alongside and above long-established coffee markets in Europe and North America.

This achievement reflects years of work, consistency, and a deep understanding of coffee that goes far beyond roasting alone. Behind it is Vytautas Kratulis, a figure whose journey is closely tied to the transformation of Lithuania itself. From the uncertainty that followed independence in the early 1990s to building one of the most respected specialty coffee companies in the world, his path mirrors the rise of a new coffee culture in an emerging region.

In this exclusive conversation with Qahwa World, Kratulis shares his story, his philosophy, and his perspective on what it truly means to produce great coffee today.

Read the full interview below.

  • To start, could you briefly introduce yourself and share the story behind Huracán Coffee?

When the Soviet Union collapsed, everything changed. Lithuania became independent in 1991, just as I turned seventeen. It was a complete reset. There were no clear rules, no stable systems, only a strong sense that we had to build a country from the ground up, including its economy, institutions, and businesses.

There was chaos, many crises, very little money, and almost no legal framework. But for a young person, it also meant freedom and possibility. Many of us wanted to travel, to see the world, and at the same time take part in building something new in a country that was just taking shape.

I started working in a distribution company handling commercial coffee brands from Sweden, Austria, Poland, and Germany. My job was simple, placing products on shelves. But the deeper I got into it, the more questions I had. I began to notice that people cared about good coffee. They were looking for it.

It also connected to my personal experience. In my family, coffee had meaning. My mother suffered from migraines, and coffee helped her. At that time, truly good coffee was rare, and because of that, its value felt higher than it does today. When something good appeared, people noticed. I kept seeing this pattern. People appreciated quality, even if they did not always have the words to describe it.

Then one day I tasted freshly roasted coffee for the first time. It was presented by a Polish entrepreneur selling drum roasting machines. That moment changed everything for me. I bought a roaster.

At that time, there was no concept of specialty coffee as we understand it today. There was no internet as we know it, no structured information, and I had no awareness of the specialty coffee movement until 2004.

In 2004, I attended an exhibition in Athens, where I met key figures from what was then the Specialty Coffee Association of Europe. That experience gave me a completely new perspective.

After returning to Vilnius, I opened the first dedicated specialty coffee shop in Lithuania, established a local SCA chapter, and organized the first national championship under international rules. We also sent our first national champion to the World Barista Championship in Seattle. That was how the Baltic region began connecting with the global specialty coffee community.

A major turning point in my career came in 2005, when I was invited to judge at the Cup of Excellence in Nicaragua. That was my first visit to a coffee origin. There, I met many of the people who shaped the specialty coffee movement. It was also my first time sitting at a Cup of Excellence cupping table. Since then, I have served as a judge in competitions in nearly every producing country that participates in the program.

  • How did you feel when you heard you had won World’s Best Coffee Roaster?

It is hard to put into words. Even if we had received silver or bronze, the feeling would have been very strong. But when you are ranked number one, you begin to reflect and look for the reasons behind it.

Looking back now, it is clear that this did not happen by chance. The result follows the work. But in that moment, the only thought was that you are simply lucky to be there.

When we received a bronze medal in the filter category in Europe and qualified for the final, we already celebrated it as the highest point in our journey. Going into the world final, we did not expect this kind of recognition, especially considering the level of markets like the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, and Scandinavia.

Today, access to great coffee is relatively equal. Roasters can find and buy exceptional lots, visit producers, and operate within well-established logistics. We all see each other’s work.

The difference lies in the market itself. In more developed markets, demand for quality is stronger and more consistent. People can pursue quality without compromise, and good coffee becomes part of everyday life.

In my local market, I am still shaped by a less mature consumer. Expectations are different, and that naturally defines certain limits.

  • What do you think made the biggest difference in this competition?

We received a strong number of medals across different categories and subcategories, close to a fifth of all awards. That range made a difference.

Beyond filter coffee, which we understand well, we also have long experience preparing roasts for milk-based drinks. We have had six national barista champions come through our team.

In areas like omni roasting, which is not something we do every day, it was a new challenge. Still, we performed well and received recognition.

Timing also played a role. It was a moment when many of our carefully sourced lots had just arrived. Every year, we make a point of buying something special, competition-level coffees. This allowed us to present strong coffees across many categories.

We prepared seriously. We had a plan for what to present, when to roast, and how to approach the competition.

We did not expect to win. But we knew how to present ourselves with respect at the highest level.

  • How would you describe your approach to roasting in simple terms?

We believe roasting should be adapted to purpose.

For milk-based drinks, we adjust the coffee to work well with milk. For filter coffee, we roast light so the coffee can express its natural character, including origin and variety.

Espresso is different. We prefer sweetness and balance, with more roundness in the cup, not just strong acidity. Our style sits somewhere between Italian and Scandinavian approaches.

Acidity is important, but we do not push it to the front. We value origin, freshness, precision, and preparation. At the same time, we do not follow trends blindly.

  • How important are your relationships with coffee farmers?

They are very important.

It is always a special feeling to know that a farmer is waiting for your order, expecting your visit, and welcoming you.

These relationships take years to build. It is about understanding each other. In the end, what a farmer chooses to sell you becomes how that country is experienced in your market.

For example, we have worked with the Pacas family in El Salvador since 2008. It is not only about rare varieties, but also about everyday coffees that truly represent a country.

I try to visit producing countries regularly to see progress and changes.

  • What is your view on blind tasting competitions?

From my perspective, they can reflect quality if the system is well structured.

Consistency, standardized preparation, and experienced judges are essential. These factors allow for objective evaluation.

I still consider Cup of Excellence the most advanced system. At the same time, Global Coffee Awards offers something valuable by comparing coffees from different countries without bias.

  • What does this win mean for the Baltic region?

It is a significant result for our region.

Our customers are part of this achievement. They trusted us for many years. I hope it gives confidence to other roasters.

At the same time, the market is still developing. Awareness and consistency are improving, but there is still a gap compared to more mature markets.

  • What are your plans after this win?

This result confirmed that what we do resonates globally.

We will continue focusing on coffee. We have expanded into products like cold brew concentrate and specialty instant coffee, as well as collaborations with other industries.

Looking ahead, I would like to be more present in the Arab coffee scene. I believe we have something meaningful to contribute there.

  • What advice would you give to roasters who want to reach this level?

Do not focus too much on others. Follow your own path.

Take part and do not let fear of losing stop you. Many strong players never even try.

This interview reflects a journey built over decades, shaped by curiosity, persistence, and a deep respect for coffee at every stage of its value chain. Huracán Coffee’s achievement is not only a win, but a signal that the global coffee map continues to evolve, opening space for new regions and new voices.

Coffee Industry Heroes Awards 2026: Finalists Announced

Melbourne – QAHWA WORLD

The Coffee Industry Heroes Awards have revealed the 2026 finalists, recognizing individuals and businesses making a significant impact on Australia’s coffee industry. The awards, part of the Melbourne Coffee Expo 2026, will take place alongside the MICE Opening Party at the Melbourne Convention & Exhibition Centre – Courtyard Venue on Thursday, 26 March 2026, from 5:30 PM to 8:30 PM. Attendees are requested to wear cocktail attire.

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The awards highlight leaders across multiple categories, celebrating innovation, mentorship, sustainability, and community contribution.

  • 2026 Finalists

Best New Cafe

  • Almost French Epicure

  • Ratio Coffee Crows Nest

  • Sidecar Roasters

Coffee Educator (Mentor)

  • Ian Abadiano, Coffee Mentality

  • Danny Andrade, Blackboard Coffee Roasters

  • Nadia Araujo Moreira, Southland Merchants

  • Simon Gautherin, Zest Specialty Coffee Roasters

  • Nicole Motteux, Sustainable Coffee Advocate

  • Andres Roaster, Rubra Coffee

  • Chris Short, Cafetto

  • Joshua Walhain, Alternative Brewing

  • Li Wang, Sanjiangwater PTY LTD

Community Champion

  • Ian Abadiano, Coffee Mentality

  • Danny Andrade, Blackboard Coffee Roasters

  • Rodney Ayton, Bean Station Wodonga

  • Andres Felipe Ballesteros Zuluaga, Rubra Coffee Roasters

  • Jon Barnett, Slurpsup Sydney

  • Marcelline Budza, Rebuild Women’s Hope Cooperative

  • Nicole Motteux, Sustainable Coffee Advocate

  • Damien O’Brien, Coffee Foundation

Home Grown Hero

  • Ian Abadiano, Coffee Mentality

  • Rebecca Zentveld, Zentbeld’s Coffee, Farm and Roastery

Lifetime Achievement

  • Danny Andrade, Blackboard Coffee Roasters

  • Angelo Augello, Formerly Bean Alliance Group

  • Sebastián Farias Arcila, Far More

  • Melissa Floreani, Clark St Coffee Roasters

  • Jack Hanna, Single Estate

  • Stephen Hurst, Mercanta Ltd.

  • Nicole Motteux, Sustainable Coffee Advocate

  • Lucy Ward, ST. ALi Coffee

Next-Gen Talent

  • Justin Calpito, Honeybird Coffee

  • Hany Ezzat, Ona Coffee / Ni Wares

  • Danni Lubbe, London Tavern Hotel

  • Jerome and Micah Manion, More Matcha

  • Efthimios Tsiukardanis, Code Black

Sustainability Champion

  • Cateco Trading Pty Limited

  • Clark St Coffee Roasters

  • Coffee Mentality

  • GRADA

  • Grounded Packaging

  • Huskee (BioPak)

  • made by Fressko

  • Pablo & Rusty’s

  • Reground

  • Sustainable Coffee Advocate

The Coffee Industry Heroes Awards honour those who advance Australia’s coffee culture, from innovative cafes and sustainable operators to influential educators and community champions. The announcement of the 2026 finalists marks a key milestone ahead of the Melbourne Coffee Expo 2026, which runs from 26 to 28 March.

World of Coffee Dubai 2026 concludes its fifth edition with a record 20,000 visits

  • 50% of the exhibition space for the sixth edition next year has already been booked
  • Brazil and other countries have announced an increase in their national pavilion spaces for the next edition
  • Results of the three live auctions announced
  • Winners honoured in the four championship categories, Best New Product, and Best Design Award
  • Jean Espanti from the United Arab Emirates crowned champion of the Cezve/Ibrik World Championship
  • Adam Rubin from Benchmark Coffee named Best Barista in the UAE
  • Jomar Morales from Benchmark Coffee takes first place in the Latte Art Championship
  • Nizam Basha Luwang from Espressi named Roaster of the Year
  • Sage wins the Best New Product Award
  • Coffee Market Innovations (CMI) wins the Best Design Award

Dubai – Qahwa World

World of Coffee Dubai 2026 concluded yesterday at the Dubai World Trade Centre, announcing the winners of the local and international championships and competitions, as well as the results of the auctions held on the first and third days. The fifth edition of the exhibition was a remarkable success, recording over 20,000 visits from specialty coffee professionals across more than 80 countries., reflecting the continued growth of international attendance and global participation, and reinforcing Dubai’s position as a leading hub for the specialty coffee industry.

The fifth edition also witnessed the signing of a three-year partnership agreement to organise the Bahrain Coffee Festival between DXB LIVE, the Bahrain Tourism and Exhibitions Authority (BTEA), and Exhibition World Bahrain (EWB). The festival’s inaugural edition achieved strong success, positioning it as a platform that combines trade and consumer-focused activities, including workshops, live coffee preparation, championships, and interactive experiences, with the aim of engaging a wider community of coffee enthusiasts, families, and the general public. The opening day also saw the signing of a five-year partnership agreement between World of Coffee Dubai and the Specialty Coffee Association (SCA), extending the collaboration through 2031.

As the 2026 edition ended yesterday evening, DXB LIVE, the integrated event management and experiential agency of the Dubai World Trade Centre and organiser of the event, confirmed strong demand for exhibition space in the next edition. 50% of the exhibition space for the sixth edition of World of Coffee Dubai 2027 has already been booked. The next edition is scheduled to take place from 26–28 January 2027 at the Dubai World Trade Centre.

The final day marked the conclusion of four championship competitions, including three UAE national titles and the World Cezve/Ibrik Championship, recognising technical excellence, consistency, and performance under internationally recognised standards.

In the UAE National Barista Championship, Adam Ruben (Benchmark Coffee) was crowned National Champion, with Nooran Albannay (Coffee Architecture) securing second place and Serkan Sagsoz (Julith Coffee) placing third, following assessments across espresso, milk-based beverages, and signature drinks.

The UAE National Latte Art Championship recognised excellence in creativity, control, and technical precision, with Jhomar Morales (Benchmark) taking first place, followed by Mark Lyster Gimeno (Heaf) and Win Min Htike (Jebena Specialty Coffee) in second and third positions respectively.

The UAE National Roasting Championship concluded with Nizam Pasha Lolowang (Espressi) awarded first place, with Ajeyudu Pathuri (Brewing Gadgets) securing second place and Raha Shahsavar (Crack Coffee Roastery)placing third, recognising excellence in roast development, flavour profiling, and consistency.

At the international level, the World Cezve/Ibrik Championship crowned Jane Espante (United Arab Emirates) as the 2026 champion, followed by Angel Kotsifakis (Greece) in second place and Waël Hachem (France) in third. The championship celebrates one of the world’s oldest coffee brewing traditions through contemporary specialty coffee standards.

Innovation and creativity were celebrated through the event’s awards programme. The Best New Product Award was presented to Sage for The Oracle Dual Boiler, recognising innovation in coffee equipment and brewing technology. The Coffee Design Award was awarded to Coffee Market Innovations (CMI), celebrating excellence in stand design, creativity, and brand presentation on the exhibition floor.

Key commercial results were confirmed through the Dubai Coffee Auction programme, with the Dubai Coffee Equipment Auction on Day One and the Exhibitors’ Coffee Auction on Day Three, organised by DXB LIVE with DMCC, delivering major milestones including a Bolivian coffee reaching USD 386 per kilogram (the origin’s second highest price on record), the first ever continental U.S. coffee offered at auction setting a new price benchmark, and a record diversity of 13 origins represented in a single auction, reinforcing World of Coffee Dubai’s role as a transparent, trade driven marketplace for global buyers and producers.

Commenting on the fifth edition, Khalid Al Hammadi, Executive Vice President of DXB LIVE, said: “World of Coffee Dubai has firmly established itself as a platform where the specialty coffee industry comes together to celebrate excellence, exchange knowledge, and conduct meaningful business. The remarkable growth in visitor numbers, along with the strong early demand for exhibition space for the 2027 edition, reflects the role of both Dubai and the event as a hub connecting markets, talent, and opportunities.”

Over the course of three days, World of Coffee Dubai 2026 brought together more than 2,100 exhibiting companies and brands from 78 countries, serving as a key meeting point for producers, roasters, manufacturers, buyers, and decision-makers across all stages of the specialty coffee value chain. The final day shifted the focus from engagement to recognition, with a formal celebration of professional excellence, innovation, and achievements within the sector.

As World of Coffee Dubai 2026 concludes, the fifth edition stands as its largest and most internationally diverse to date, underscoring Dubai’s growing influence as a global hub for specialty coffee trade, professional excellence, and innovation.

About World of Coffee Dubai

World of Coffee Dubai (WOC Dubai) is the premier coffee trade show for exhibitors and visitors looking to break into the Middle East’s burgeoning coffee industry. The event showcases popular features like the Roaster Village, engaging lectures, the Cupping Room, the SCA UAE National Championships, the Coffee Design Awards, the Best New Display Product Competition, Brew Bar, and the SCA Community Lounge, where buyers and sellers come together to reconnect and establish new business relationships. The exhibition welcomes local, regional, and global professionals in the coffee industry including producers, manufacturers, traders, farmers, international experts, distributors, small and medium companies, coffee shops, roasters, hotels, and coffee enthusiasts from around the world.

About SCA

The Specialty Coffee Association (SCA) is the world’s largest nonprofit, membership-based trade association in the coffee industry. Representing thousands of coffee professionals globally from producers to baristas, the organization is built on foundations of openness, inclusivity, and the power of shared knowledge, fostering an international coffee community to make specialty coffee a thriving, equitable, and sustainable activity for the entire value chain. From coffee farmers to baristas and roasters, our membership spans the globe, encompassing every element of the coffee value chain. The SCA acts as a unifying force within the specialty coffee industry and works to make coffee better by raising standards worldwide through a collaborative and progressive approach.

About DXB LIVE

DXB LIVE, the premier event management and experiential agency of Dubai World Trade Centre (DWTC) offers a comprehensive range of services, providing innovative solutions for all types of events and experiences both within the UAE and internationally. Over the years, DXB LIVE has successfully created a fully integrated and globally recognized experiential environment, driven by its state-of-the-art in-house production facilities and advanced technical expertise. The team covers strategic concept

Jhomar Morales Crowned Champion of the UAE National Latte Art Championship 2026

Dubai – Qahwa World

Jhomar Morales of Benchmark Coffee has claimed first place in the UAE National Latte Art Championship during the fifth edition of World of Coffee Dubai 2026, held at the Dubai World Trade Centre. The championship recognized creativity, precision, and technical excellence in crafting milk-based coffee beverages, a highlight among the four national and international competitions featured at the event.

Morales was followed by Mark Lyster Gimeno from Heaf in second place, and Win Min Htike from Jebena Specialty Coffee in third, after rigorous evaluations based on artistic design, milk texture, coffee balance, and overall presentation.

The UAE National Latte Art Championship is part of the wider set of competitions held at World of Coffee Dubai, which also included the UAE National Barista Championship, the UAE National Roasting Championship, and the World Cezve/Ibrik Championship. At this year’s event, Adam Rubin from Benchmark Coffee was crowned UAE National Barista Champion, while Nizam Basha Luwang from Espressi was named Roaster of the Year, and Jane Espante from the UAE won the Cezve/Ibrik World Championship.

World of Coffee Dubai 2026 brought together over 2,100 exhibiting companies from 78 countries, attracting more than 20,000 visitors from across the globe. The event also celebrated innovation through awards such as the Best New Product Award, won by Sage for the Oracle Dual Boiler, and the Coffee Design Award, awarded to Coffee Market Innovations (CMI).

The exhibition confirmed strong demand for next year’s edition, with 50% of the space already booked and several countries, including Brazil, announcing an increase in their national pavilion areas.

Jhomar  Morales’ victory underscores the growing expertise and creativity of UAE-based baristas in the global specialty coffee scene, reflecting Dubai’s emerging position as a hub for coffee excellence and innovation.

World of Coffee Dubai 2027 is scheduled to take place from 26–28 January 2027 at the Dubai World Trade Centre.