Three generations of green gold from the Western Ghats.

For over five decades, our family has lived between the cardamom rows of Idukki and the spice ports of the Arabian Sea growing, grading, and shipping what locals here have always called elaichi.

How It Began

It started with one man, one estate, and one stubborn belief Kerala cardamom is the best in the world.

In 1972, our grandfather

bought 12 acres of forested land in the Kumily hills, cleared a single patch, and planted his first cardamom seedlings. He had no buyers, no machinery, and no name in the trade — only the soil, the shade trees, and the monsoon.

For the first decade he sold every kilo at the local Kumily auction. By the late 1980s, his sons had joined the business and the family began packing for traders shipping to the Gulf  back when cardamom from Idukki was already the most prized green pod in the souks of Dubai and Riyadh.

In 1998, we registered as a direct exporter. Today the third generation runs the floor but the original 12-acre estate above Kumily still produces, and we still grade by hand before any machine touches a pod.

A legacy measured in harvests.

Every milestone below was earned one cardamom season at a time.

1984

The first estate

Mathew Joseph plants the first cardamom seedlings on 12 acres above Kumily.

1992

Sons join the business

Second generation enters the family trade, expanding partner farms across Idukki.

1998

First Gulf shipment

Indirect supply begins flowing to Dubai-based importers through a Cochin trader.

2008

Registered exporter

We obtain our own Spices Board registration and IEC code — direct exports begin.

The Cardamom Hills

Where the air smells like our product.

The Cardamom Hills of the Western Ghats known locally as

0 are the only place on earth where green cardamom develops the depth of aroma our buyers demand. The shade canopy of rosewood and silver oak, the wet southwest monsoon, and the volcanic soil all converge here.

Our estates and partner farms sit between 800 and 1,400 metres above sea level  the elevation band where the volatile oil content
peaks. Pods are still picked by hand, four to five times per season, only when fully formed and just before splitting.

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