Coffee Processing: How Do You Get from Cherry too Bean?

What makes coffee taste like coffee? That's a more complicated question than you might think. At every step of a coffee bean's life, something intervenes that could drastically alter its flavour: Plant variety, agricultural approach, terroir, processing, roasting, storage, and, of course, brewing all play a huge part in how your morning cup tastes. Today, let's explore one of these influences:

Processing:

What we call the coffee bean is actually more like a seed or pit—it grows inside a thin-fleshed fruit not unlike a cherry (which is actually what it's called by most coffee professionals), which ripens about nine months after the coffee plant flowers.

In order to prepare the beans for roasting, they must first be removed from this outer casing using one of several techniques—a "washed," a "pulp natural," or a "natural" method—which may vary based on factors like regional climate, tradition, and the coffee's intended flavour profile. 

This can be a very tricky part of the life cycle of a coffee bean, as even the highest-quality crop can quickly be ruined by mould, over-drying, inattentiveness, bad weather, or pest infestation.

But what are these techniques, exactly, and what effect do the different methods have on the overall flavour?

Washed or Wet Process

After picking, the coffee bean is removed from its cherry, sometimes underwater, or in specially designed machines. Once the fruit is sloughed away, the beans are dried in their parchment, either by the sun, often on large cement patios, or in drying machines. 

This type of process is part of what contributes to the clean, classic Latin American coffee profile; beans treated this way can be sweetly chocolate- and nutty flavour forward, often with a subtle fruitiness.

Pulp Natural

Also sometimes called "semi-washed," this style of processing involves removing the skin of the ripe coffee cherry, leaving the bean to dry in the sort of sticky guts of the fruit—this can be especially precarious, as the beans in this gummy-coated state are vulnerable to bacteria and mould, and need to be monitored constantly. Because of the extended period of time spent inside the cherry, these coffees tend to have a creamier mouth feel and deeper fruity flavours, and can sometimes have a bit of an earthy quality.

Natural or Sun-Dried


The life of a coffee bean, from plant to roasted bean is a long one. There are many different steps in the process, each step has the ability to alter the taste of the coffee you end up drinking!
Do you know where your favourite coffee comes from?

0 comments

Leave a comment