Coffee Production
Coffee Production
Coffee Production
Picking
Traditional coffee drying in Boquete,
A coffee plant usually starts to produce flowers three to four years Panamá
after it is planted,[2] and it is from these flowers that the fruits of the
plant (commonly known as coffee cherries) appear, with the first
useful harvest possible around five years after planting. The cherries
ripen around eight months after the emergence of the flower, by
changing color from green to red, and it is at this time that they
should be harvested. In most coffee-growing countries, there is one
major harvest a year; though in countries like Colombia, where
there are two flowerings a year, there is a main and secondary crop,
the main one April to June and a smaller one in November to
December.[3]
Coffee bean harvester, Mareeba,
In most countries, the coffee crop is picked by hand, a labor-
Queensland, Australia
intensive and difficult process, though in places like Brazil, where
the landscape is relatively flat and the coffee fields are immense, the
process has been mechanized.[3] Whether picked by hand or by
machine, all coffee is harvested in one of two ways:
Strip picked
All coffee fruit is removed from the tree, regardless of maturation state. This can either be done by machine
or by hand. In the first method, pickers generally place a canvas on the ground. They then grab the branch
next to the trunk with their hands and pull outward, knocking all of the fruit onto the ground. After doing
this with all branches and trees for the length of the canvas, the pickers then collect the coffee in bags. This
process can be facilitated through the use of mechanical strippers.
Selectively picked
Only the ripe cherries are harvested and they are picked individually by hand. Pickers rotate among the
trees every eight to ten days, choosing only the cherries which are at the peak of ripeness. It usually takes
two to four years after planting for a coffee plant to produce coffee beans that are ripe enough to harvest.
The plant eventually grows small white blossoms that drop and are replaced by green berries. These green
berries will become a deep red color as they ripen. It takes about 9 months for the green cherries to reach
their deepest red color. Because this kind of harvest is labor-intensive, and thus more costly, it is used
primarily to harvest the finer arabica beans.[3]
The laborers who pick coffee by hand receive payment by the
basketful. As of 2003, payment per basket is between US$1.00 to
$10 with the overwhelming majority of the laborers receiving
payment at the lower end. An experienced coffee picker can collect
up to six or seven baskets a day. Depending on the grower, coffee
pickers are sometimes specifically instructed to not pick green
coffee berries since the seeds in the berries are not fully formed or
mature. This discernment typically only occurs with growers who
harvest for higher end/specialty coffee where the pickers are paid
better for their labor.
Lots including unripe coffee fruit are often used to produce cheaper
mass consumer coffee beans, which are characterized by a
displeasingly bitter/astringent flavor and a sharp odor. Red berries,
with their higher aromatic oil and lower organic acid content, are
more fragrant, smooth, and mellow. As such, coffee picking is one
of the most important stages in coffee production.[4] Mechanical strippers used for coffee
fruit harvesting
Wet process
In the "wet process", the fruit covering the coffee beans is removed
before they are dried. Coffee processed by the wet method is called
wet processed or washed coffee.[5] The wet method requires the
use of specific equipment and substantial quantities of water.
The fermentation process has to be carefully monitored to ensure A field-expedient coffee fermentation
that the coffee does not acquire undesirable, sour flavors. For most tank in Vietnam
coffees, mucilage removal through fermentation takes between 8
and 36 hours, depending on the temperature, thickness of the
mucilage layer, and concentration of the enzymes. The end of the fermentation is assessed by feel, as the
parchment surrounding the beans loses its slimy texture and acquires a rougher "pebbly" feel. When the
fermentation is complete, the coffee is thoroughly washed with clean water in tanks or in special washing
machines.[6]
The fermentation process produces wastewater that contains a high organic load, which should be
prevented from entering fresh water supplies.[7] In machine-assisted wet processing, fermentation is not
used to separate the bean from the remainder of the pulp; rather, this is done through mechanical scrubbing.
This process reduce both water use and the generation of
wastewater. In addition, removing mucilage by machine is easier
and more predictable than removing it by fermenting and washing.
However, by eliminating the fermentation step and prematurely
separating fruit and bean, mechanical demucilaging can remove an
important tool that mill operators have of influencing coffee flavor.
Furthermore, the ecological criticism of the ferment-and-wash
method increasingly has become moot, since a combination of low- Sorting coffee in water
water equipment plus settling tanks allows mill operators to carry
out fermentation with limited pollution.[5] The downside in using a
machine assisted process or "semi-wash" is a high chance of the beans being chipped or damaged.[8] The
damaged beans are more prominent on lower altitude grown beans and certain varietals with porous
features.
Any wet processing of coffee produces coffee wastewater, which can be a pollutant.[9] Ecologically
sensitive farms reprocess the wastewater along with the shell and mucilage as compost to be used in soil
fertilization programs. The amount of water used in processing can vary, but most often is used in a 1 to 1
ratio.
After the pulp has been removed, what is left is the bean surrounded by two additional layers: the silver skin
and the parchment. The beans must be dried to a water content of about 10% before they are stable. Coffee
beans can be dried in the sun or by machine but in most cases it is dried in the sun to 12–13% moisture and
brought down to 10% by machine. Drying entirely by machine is normally only done where space is at a
premium or the humidity is too high for the beans to dry before mildewing.
When dried in the sun, coffee is most often spread out in rows on
large patios where it needs to be raked every six hours to promote
even drying and prevent the growth of mildew. Some coffee is
dried on large raised tables where the coffee is turned by hand.
Drying coffee this way has the advantage of allowing air to
circulate better around the beans promoting more even drying but
increases cost and labor significantly.
After the drying process (in the sun or through machines), the
Coffee drying in the sun. Doka
parchment skin or pergamino is thoroughly dry and crumbly, and
Plantation Costa Rica
easily removed in the hulling process. Coffee occasionally is sold
and shipped in parchment or en pergamino, but most often a
machine called a huller is used to crunch off the parchment skin
before the beans are shipped.[5]
Dry process
The coffee cherries are spread out in the sun, either on large concrete or brick patios or on matting raised to
waist height on trestles. As the cherries dry, they are raked or turned by hand to ensure even drying and
prevent mildew.[10] It may take up to four weeks before the cherries are dried to the optimum moisture
content, depending on the weather conditions. On larger plantations, machine-drying is sometimes used to
speed up the process. Various types of mechanical driers exist and can be fueled by gas, wood, or
sometimes discarded parchment.[11] The technique used to dry coffees mechanically can be viewed
similarly to the roasting process; a drying regime can be employed in a way to preserve the quality of the
beans.
The drying operation is the most important stage of the process, since it affects the final quality of the green
coffee. A coffee that has been overdried will become brittle and produce too many broken beans during
hulling (broken beans are considered defective beans). Coffee that has not been dried sufficiently will be
too moist and prone to rapid deterioration caused by the attack of fungi and bacteria.
The dried cherries are stored in bulk in special silos until they are sent to the mill where hulling, sorting,
grading and bagging take place. All the outer layers of the dried cherry are removed in one step by the
hulling machine.
The dry method is used for about 90% of the Arabica coffee produced in Brazil, most of the coffees
produced in Ethiopia, Haiti and Paraguay, as well as for some Arabicas produced in India and Ecuador.
Almost all Robustas are processed by this method. It is not practical in very rainy regions, where the
humidity of the atmosphere is too high or where it rains frequently during harvesting.[6]
Semi-dry process
Semi-dry is a hybrid process used in Indonesia and Brazil. The process is also called "wet-hulled", "semi-
washed", "pulped natural" or, in Indonesia, "Giling Basah". Literally translated from Indonesian, Giling
Basah means "wet grinding", and refers to an earlier "hulling" step than compared to the common
washed/wet process.[12] This process is said to reduce acidity and increase body.[13]
Most small-scale farmers in Sumatra, Sulawesi, Flores and Papua use the giling basah process. In this
process, farmers remove the outer skin from the cherries mechanically, using locally built pulping machines.
The coffee beans, still coated with mucilage, are then stored for up to a day. Following this waiting period,
the mucilage is washed off and the parchment coffee is partially dried in the sun and sold at 25% to 40%
moisture content. Directly hereafter the parchment layer is hulled off and the beans are dried further to 10–
12% moisture content. Due to the "wet hulling" the beans end with a blue(ish) hue color.[13]
The tricky part during the semi-washed process method are bacteria which are always around. Fermentation
can start immediately as honey dried coffee beans have a remaining "sugar" layer which is vulnerable to
any sort of mold and offers feeding ground for bacteria. Drying carefully and under supervision is crucial to
the success of this processing method. The beans need to constantly move during the drying process to
prevent mold and fungal infections. The processor needs to rake the green coffee beans 2–3 times per hour
to ensure a safe drying process. Once the beans have reached a sufficient moisture level, again, the beans
are dry milled to remove the "parchment" layers and are sent off to roasters and wholesalers globally.
Honey processing bridges the gap between washed and natural coffees as it generally possesses some of the
body and sweetness of a natural while retaining some of the acidity of a washed. Honey coffees often have
a syrupy body with enhanced sweetness, round acidity and earthy undertones.
Milling
The final steps in coffee processing involve removing the last layers
of dry skin and remaining fruit residue from the now-dry coffee,
and cleaning and sorting it. These steps are often called dry milling
to distinguish them from the steps that take place before drying,
which collectively are called wet milling.[3][5]
Hulling
The first step in dry milling is the removal of what is left of the fruit
from the bean, whether it is the crumbly parchment skin of wet- Structure of coffee berry and beans:
processed coffee, the parchment skin and dried mucilage of semi- 1: center cut 2: bean (endosperm) 3:
dry-processed coffee, or the entire dry, leathery fruit covering of the silver skin (testa, epidermis), 4:
dry-processed coffee. Hulling is done with the help of machines, parchment (hull, endocarp) 5: pectin
which can range from simple millstones to sophisticated machines layer 6: pulp (mesocarp) 7: outer skin
that gently whack at the coffee.[3] (pericarp, exocarp)
Polishing
This is an optional process in which any silver skin that remains on the beans after hulling is removed in a
polishing machine.[3] This is done to improve the appearance of green coffee beans and eliminate a
byproduct of roasting called chaff. It is described by some to be detrimental to the taste because it raises the
temperature of the bean through friction, which changes the chemical makeup of the bean.
Most fine coffee goes through a battery of machines that sort the coffee by the density of bean and by bean
size, all the while removing sticks, rocks, nails, and miscellaneous debris that may have become mixed with
the coffee during drying. First machines blow the beans into the air; those that fall into bins closest to the air
source are heaviest and biggest; the lightest (and likely defective) beans plus chaff are blown in the farthest
bin. Other machines shake the beans through a series of sieves, sorting them by size. Finally, a machine
called a gravity separator shakes the sized beans on a tilted table, so that the heaviest, densest and best
vibrate to one side of the pulsating table, and the lightest to the other.[5][14]
The final step in the cleaning and sorting procedure is called color sorting, or separating defective beans
from sound beans on the basis of color rather than density or size. Color sorting is the trickiest and perhaps
most important of all the steps in sorting and cleaning. With most high-quality coffees color sorting is done
in the simplest possible way: by hand. Teams of workers pick discolored and other defective beans from the
sound beans. The very best coffees may be hand-cleaned twice (double picked) or even three times (triple
picked). Coffee that has been cleaned by hand is usually called European preparation; most specialty
coffees have been cleaned and sorted in this way.[5]
Color sorting can also be done by machines. Streams of beans fall
rapidly, one at a time, past sensors that are set according to
parameters that identify defective beans by value (dark to light) or
by color. A tiny, decisive puff of compressed air pops each defective
bean out of the stream of sound beans the instant the machine
detects an anomaly. However, these machines are currently not used
widely in the coffee industry for two reasons. First, the capital
investment to install these delicate machines and the technical
support to maintain them is daunting. Second, sorting coffee by Ethiopian women sort coffee beans
hand supplies much-needed work for the small rural communities at a long table.
that often cluster around coffee mills. Nevertheless, computerized
color sorters are essential to coffee industries in regions with
relatively high standards of living and high wage demands.[5]
Grading
Other steps
Aging
All coffee when it was introduced in Europe came from the port of
Mocha in what is now Yemen. Importing the beans to Europe
required a lengthy sea voyage around the Horn of Africa, which
ultimately changed the coffee's flavor due to age and exposure to
saline air. Coffee later spread to India and Indonesia but still
required a long sea voyage. Once the Suez Canal was opened,
shipment time to Europe was greatly reduced and coffee with flavor
less affected by salt and age began arriving. This fresher coffee
was, to some degree, rejected as Europeans had not developed a
Monsooned Malabar arabica, an
taste for unaged coffee. To meet the demand for aged coffee, some
"aged" green bean from India,
product was aged in large, open-sided warehouses at port for six or
compared with the much darker
more months in an attempt to expose the coffee to the same
Yirgachefe beans from Ethiopia
conditions that shipments used to require.
Decaffeination
Decaffeination is the process of extracting caffeine from green coffee beans prior to roasting. The most
common decaffeination process used in the United States is supercritical carbon dioxide (CO2 ) extraction.
In this process, moistened green coffee beans are contacted with large quantities of supercritical CO2 (CO2
maintained at a pressure of about 4,000 pounds force per square inch (28 MPa) and temperatures between
90 and 100 °C (194 and 212 °F)), which removes about 97% of the caffeine from the beans. The caffeine is
then recovered from the CO2 , typically using an activated carbon adsorption system.
Another commonly used method is solvent extraction, typically using oil (extracted from roasted coffee) or
ethyl acetate as a solvent. In this process, solvent is added to moistened green coffee beans to extract most
of the caffeine from the beans. After the beans are removed from the solvent, they are steam-stripped to
remove any residual solvent. The caffeine is then recovered from the solvent, and the solvent is re-used.
The Swiss Water Process is also used for decaffeination. Decaffeinated coffee beans have a residual
caffeine content of about 0.1% on a dry basis. Not all facilities have decaffeination operations, and
decaffeinated green coffee beans are purchased by many facilities that produce decaffeinated coffee.
Storage
Green coffee is usually transported in jute bags or woven poly bags.
While green coffee may be usable for several years, it is vulnerable
to quality degradation based on how it is stored. Jute bags are
extremely porous, exposing the coffee to whatever elements it is
surrounded by. Coffee that is poorly stored may develop a burlap-
like taste known as "bagginess", and its positive qualities may fade.
Green coffee stored in bags
In recent years, the specialty coffee market has begun to utilize
enhanced storage method. A gas barrier liner to jute bags, is
sometimes used to preserve the quality of green coffee. Less frequently, green coffee is stored in vacuum
packaging; while vacuum packs further reduce the ability of green coffee to interact with oxygen at
atmospheric moisture, it is a significantly more expensive storage option.
Roasting
Although not considered part of the processing pipeline proper, nearly all coffee sold to consumers
throughout the world is sold as roasted coffee in general one of four degrees of roasting: light, medium,
medium-dark, and dark.[15] Consumers can also elect to buy unroasted coffee to be roasted at home. Green
coffee can also be used for the preparation of infusions or ingested as ground powder, but this is of limited
relevance to the global coffee market.[16]
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