Coffee Types - The Basics

Posted by Dad | Coffee Facts | Wednesday 21 January 2009 6:39 pm

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On average, the highest quality coffee is grown in altitudes around 3000 feet. This altitude allows for a elegant, yet complex flavor blend in the coffee cherries which contain the beans. These fruits must then be hand-picked from trees which can bear flowers, green fruit, and ripe cherries all at the same time.

The outer layers of the coffee cherry are removed to reveal 2 beans, which are then cleaned, dried, graded and gone over by hand. Coffee beans range in color from pale green to dark yellow when raw. Coffee beans are exported in their raw state for roasting, blending and grinding at their final destination. Most coffee beans you will find in stores are Coffea robusta and Coffea arabica.


Standard American roast: beans are medium-roasted, resulting in a moderate brew, not too light or too heavy in flavor.

French roast and dark French roast: heavily-roasted beans, a deep chocolate brown which produce a stronger coffee.

Italian roast: glossy, brown-black, strongly flavored, used for espresso.

European roast: two-thirds heavy-roast beans blended with one-third regular-roast.

Viennese roast: one-third heavy-roast beans blended with two-thirds regular-roast.

Instant coffee: a powder made of heat-dried freshly brewed coffee.

Freeze-dried coffee: brewed coffee that has been frozen into a slush before the water is evaporated, normally more expensive that instants but with a superior flavor.

Decaffeinated coffee: caffeine is removed from the beans before roasting via the use of a chemical solvent (which disappears completely when the beans are roasted) or the Swiss water process which steams the beans and then scrapes off the caffeine-laden outer layers.


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