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Green Coffee

Green Coffee Screens and Why Roasters Care

green coffee sizing / grading screens

available now at: LINK to screens

This is a repost of a former blog, including a new YouTube video below and limited availabilty of hand crafted wooden coffee sieves made in Vietnam. Get yours while they last!

—— former blog post follows ———

How is green coffee graded?

What is a coffee quality score?

And, what grading criteria do we USE?

We’ll answer these 3 questions and more in the following discussion. For some coffee fans, this may feel like information overload. For other coffee pros, this may be a good primer to whet your appetite for the SCA Green Coffee Foundations course. More to come.


Coffee is “green” before it is roasted.

Coffee must be roasted before we can brew and enjoy it.

If you are a coffee roaster, then you have probably been solicited by green coffee sellers. They promise a beautiful crop and offer to send or drop off samples free of charge. They ensure you that this green coffee is off high quality at a great price.

However, it is very common that you may receive a 100g-300g sample which was cleaned by hand, to help you (the green buyer) to have a great first impression. This would in turn lead you to consider buying on the basis of a non-representative sample. After all you’ll be getting the real deal, from a 60kg bag.

As a roaster you may be convinced - this coffee is great! It’s clean and tastes great. “Give me 10 bags!” However, months later when the 10 bags roll in strapped to a +600kg pallet you may find that the coffee looks less clean. We’ll talk about “clean” and “defects” soon.

This may be a dramatic (I hope as a roaster you have had many positive experiences), but it does happen quite often that samples do not represent the actual product. So let’s consider what variables contribute to creating our Green Coffee Grading Scale. As a buyer, it’s essential we are on the same page as our seller.

When Grading Coffee on a Scale:

  1. We grade by size

  2. We grade by defect count

  3. We grade by cupping scores

  4. We grade by other criteria (elevation, etc.)

    Together - we harmonize for common language



Size Matters, Or Does It?

Let’s talk about coffee size ratings and how they can easily lead our judgement astray. There are 2 major principles at work here when discussing size of coffee beans. One is much more important for final quality than the other. However, valuing (pricing) the coffee may not correlate in the end.

First, coffee beans should be sorted, shaken, sifted according to size. As a specialty coffee buyer, we seek a homogenous size when purchasing. A beans size should be as close as possible to it’s neighbor. Small beans are all together, medium beans are separated, and so on.

We measure size with coffee screens. Each size on a coffee screen is an incremental measure - the size of a hole in the screen. Those increments increase stepwise by 1/64 an inch. The most common screen sizes (diameters of holes) range from 10-20. Stated another way, super small beans fall through 10/64 inch (4mm) diameter holes while super large beans are suspended (not falling through) holes with a 20/64 inch (8mm) diameter. We would grade those small beans “screen size 10” while we grade the large beans “screen size 20+”. The graphic below offers some clarity and breakdown with conversions for various countries.

As you can see above (we are not to the 2nd point yet) there is some language introduced which could be misleading. Calling super large beans “AA” or “Supremo” sounds much better than a “B” or “Terceras”. Many taste tests have been done and we cannot conclude that large beans taste better (or worse) than small beans. More on that soon.

The second point, is about homogeneity. A coffee roaster wants their coffee to taste as good as it can, no matter where it comes from or how large the bean is. An essential part of roasting great coffee is consistency of roast development. Imagine roasting large items (beans) with very small items (beans). The large will roast at a different speed than the small and require different amounts of heat. When one is properly roasted another will not yet be ready. When the other is finally roasted properly, then former will be overdeveloped or burnt. This is an unfortunate and common phenomenon when large and small beans are all mixed together. There is also much more to be said about blending for espresso, but that will be left to another discussion entirely.

Defects Matter!

The best coffee is clean coffee. So how do we understand what is clean or “dirty”? Defects come from several key areas. One is pre-processing - something resulting from the farm and from nature. Another is during processing - something from mishandling or missteps in the process of removing seed from fruit. Another is during storage - before the coffee ever gets to a roastery (or heaven forbid in your roastery) while it’s sitting in the bag, on a truck or in storage.

Defects are also broken down into 2 categories: Primary and Secondary Defects. Primary defects will knock your coffee out of “specialty” status with just 1 or a couple present. If your coffee has a few Secondary defects it may still qualify as “specialty” but you can’t have too many or it will again fall out of “specialty” status. It’s a simple chart to follow, but the challenge is personally delineating what defects constitute and to what severity each is. This is where working with a professional or getting some basic training in Green Coffee comes in helpful.

Insert plug with link for Green Coffee Foundations course : )

Primary Defects.png
Secondary Defects.png

Cupping Scores (should) Matter!

It could surprise you that traditional coffee grade metrics are not based upon cupping scores. I can see a valid argument for and against this. We’ll look at both perspectives.

“Cupping” is a coffee term where we run quality control on a batch of coffee. It’s also super cool and super nerdy for many specialty coffee pros. Imagine a bunch of professionals dipping spoons into community bowls slurping and spitting with expressions of Mmmm… Ohhhh… while making notations on clipboards.

The notes we take in cupping constitute a score where 100 points are possible. No one ever scores a coffee a perfect 100. The most rare and beautiful coffees score in the 90s. Good coffees (and the majority of specialty) fall within the range of 82-88. However, when a coffee scores below 80 points, we must remove “specialty” classfication for it. Below 80 coffees are considered “commercial grade”.

Coffee Cupping Scores are comprised of:

  • Fragrance (quality and intensity)

  • Aroma (quality and intensity)

  • Acidity (quality and intensity)

  • Body (quality and intensity)

  • Flavor (quality)

  • Aftertaste (quality)

  • Balance (quality)

  • Sweetness (yes/no presence)

  • Uniformity (yes/no)

  • Clean cup (yes/no)

  • and an Overall rating (quality)

What does it mean, to not be clean?

If a coffee is not uniformly clean, then there is a “Taint” (minor infraction) or a “Fault” (major infraction). If a coffee has a Taint it is penalized -2 points for every cup with the taint. Many small human errors within the supply chain can introduce taints. The coffee may still be enjoyable and a common consumer may not notice the Taint. If discovered, the coffee may still be considered “specialty” with above 80 points, but the critical question becomes: “can we remove or resolve this taint?” Unless it’s a roaster error, there is little you can do to remove the taint. At that point, many tainted coffees will be dark roasted to cover up slight taint.

A “Fault” will be much more severe. Faults dominate your impression and the cup. They cannot just be roasted out or masked. These coffees will often be sold for commercial and instant coffee use or they may be flavored with chemicals and syrups to mask the extremely unpleasant character they have taken on.

A coffee with soft or subtle traits (following) may be called a “taint” while those with dominant and overbearing traits listed below would be classified as a fault. These include:

  • Fermented or Mouldy

  • Musty or Rioy

  • Earthy or Potato or Raw Peanut

  • Unripeness or Greenness

  • Hard or Astringent cup

  • Woody or Pulpy

  • Rubbery or Petroleum

  • And more.

Pulling it all together.

The coffee industry has the benefit (and at times encumbrance) of long tradition. Coffee growing nations and practices are disperse and disparate across the world. As a result various practices and standards have evolved. While we have learned from one another, we also have formed regional, national and cultural habits around coffee. One of those key factors includes coffee grading and quality measures as they have evolved through language and time.

Due to the wonderful diversity in coffee around the world, we should never judge a fine Chinese coffee from Pu’er in the same manner as a fine coffee from Sumatra, Indonesia. While some aspects will correlate, many will be entirely different. Likewise to judge a Panama Geisha on the same scale as a Kenyan coffee using only one metric is foolish.

If you want to buy a coffee to roast for other people, let’s consider the bigger picture. What are their needs and desires. How can we best serve them?

What qualities will they love in this coffee?

How will they use this coffee?

What price is appropriate for them?

 

If this was a worthy read, please consider sharing and liking.

Thank You! ~ Adam

Perspectives in Coffee - Peru Armonia Gabriela Chacra D'dago Coffee

Join us for this interview featured on YouTube at Perspectives in Coffee for Peruvian coffee, availabile in limited quantity at our store, in the coffee Lab and directly with Sunao Coffee. Sunao Coffee is one of the many brands supported by Peruvian Portla lead by Gabriela and her team. Check out Chacra D'dago Coffee a.k.a. Armonia while supplies last here: https://sca.training/shop-offers/peru-armonia-green-coffee-500g

This coffee is smooth, full bodied with apple, sugarcane, milk chocolate smooth. It roasts beautfifully light and has a strong beautiful bouquet roasted medium-dark. A versatile coffee that will please all crowds black or with milk, sugar, hot or on ice!

visit Sunao here: https://sunaocoffee.com/

Sample coffee ⬇️ below

What is the CVA by the SCA - Coffee Value Assessment

It’s time to dive into the CVA by the SCA.

This multi-part series has long been waiting, in the making. We need to unpack the great research and thought that the Specialty Coffee Association has put into the Coffee Value Assessment tool. With white papers and research examining coffee cupper value assessments, cupping scores, green coffee scores and more - we will seek to understand how the SCA CVA was created and how coffee professionals can use it in their coffee purchasing and roasting decisions.

Please let us know what questions you have and if this information is helpful. Thank you!

Cupping Controversial Coffees

Presented at Coffee Fest, Seattle, WA

Saturday 1 Oct, 2022 

By Adam S. Carpenter

Founder & Lead AST

ROCC Coffee Co.

Greeting & Invitation

Thank you for attending this session!

I’m excited to work on this topic together with you today. We are all learning and growing to develop better coffee cupping and sensory skills.  This is one of three sessions prepared for Coffee Fest PNW, 2022. 

  1. Developing and Maintaining a Coffee Training Program.

  2. How to Get the Best from Your Beans: from Sample, to Profile to Production Roasting.

  3. Cupping Controversial Coffees.

If you are interested in these other sessions or would like to connect, I would be happy to share and dialogue.

This session has an accompanying PDF available by blog and email. There may also be discount codes available if you wish to join one of our certified Specialty Coffee Association courses always available online.

We also have great training kits available at www.sca.training with tools and equipment at www.rocc.coffee.

Introduction

I approach our time together with humility. I know in the crowd we have coffee experts with experiences beyond my own. I am always learning and looking forward to be challenged, so I appreciate your grace as I too extend grace to you on the path of study and practice you are currently walking.

My name is Adam and I love helping people and businesses grow. Our vision at ROCC is to use training and tools to build a Global Community and Provide a Playground that Makes Life Better.

I grew up on a small farm in Michigan drinking Folgers instant coffee with my dad and grandpa.  They worked hard and I wanted to be like them. In university I had the chance to stay at a Costa Rican coffee farm. Picking coffee cherries by day and playing futbol at night changed my life.

My wife and I married, went to China as English teachers and then in 2012, I opened Central China’s first artisan coffee roastery - ROCC. We roasted wholesale coffees and had two retail outlets. One coffee window and one full Coffee Discovery Bar. In 2015 I started training as a fully certified AST with the SCAE running courses in both English and Mandarin Chinese all over China. Today I lead certified SCA courses online and offline in the Coffee Skills Program while supplying training tools and coaching for clients - especially roasters & labs.

I would be honored to work with you or your team to grow your business.


I LOVE to cup coffees, but honestly I was afraid of the SCA cupping form for quite a while. It felt cumbersome and I always had a creeping thought in the back of my mind, “you’re liking missing something or doing this wrong.” I want you to know that we all start somewhere and have similar fears or doubts. Doubt is inherent to sensory work and cupping because no-one of us has the complete picture. That’s why we cup coffees together and calibrate with one another to get closer to a group and global norm.

I LOVE cupping coffees and am proud to cup alongside you today!


Cupping Controversial Coffees

It’s time to introduce our six coffees. These coffees were selected to push the boundaries of the SCA cupping form and to stretch many of us outside of the normal coffees we are exposed to in our cafes, roasteries and sales catalog. 

First, the SCA cupping form was designed for washed Arabica coffees. However many roasters use various processing methods such as: dry/natural, honey, semi-washed, and new experimental anaerobic processing methods. We have many of these today in addition to Robusta coffees (which have a different cupping form).

The SCA cupping form was designed for washed arabicas only.

After we smell and taste our coffees we will gather back together to share insights, ask questions and discuss any “Wow!” moments. We will also take a quick look at basic concepts with coffee species, grades, processing and roast impacts. If time permits or if it happens naturally we can calibrate our cupping results together.

Our Coffees

  • Our Robusta Table (3)

    • A high quality, Organic India bean from the Araku Valley, dry/natural processed. 

    • A fine, Vietnam Lam Dong Central Highlands bean “winey” dry/natural processed.

    • A standard, Uganda Screen 15 dry/natural processed bean.

  • Our Arabica Table (3)

    • A commercial grade India Kent/Timor Blend, from Araku Valley dry/natural processed.

    • A specialty anaerobic honey process bean from Honduras.

    • A specialty anaerobic wet hulled Sumatra coffee.

Cupping and Sensory Rules

Regardless of the audience, I want to ensure that we are on the same page with our cupping protocols. We want to adhere to SCA cupping standards as instructed by the SCA Cupping Protocol (available PDF) practiced around the world. If you are unclear about roast, ratio, grind, water, etc. variables, we can discuss these at the end of our session. However, I’d also like to remind us of cupping etiquette.

My house rules (established from cupping cross-culturally for over a decade) is that there are many bad habits or personalized preferences that can interfere with others proper cupping experiences. Together out of etiquette let’s focus on creating an optimal atmosphere and environment for others by collectively:

  • Affirming this is a judgment free zone, where we are collaborating - not competing.

  • Not whistling, creating drama or drawing attention to ourselves through our slurping habits. We should be attuned to the coffees and seek to not disturb others.

  • Restraining from moving cups, shaking grounds and otherwise disturbing the cupping setup.

  • Not moving too slowly (give everyone a chance) and not pushing up near or pressuring the person in front of us. We should move at a steady pace and at times, we may not be able to catch our cupping results, but should move for the next person to have a chance.

  • Using a dispensing cup or 2 spoons with one designated to slurp and the other designated to transfer coffee without transferring germs.

  • Keeping thoughts and reflections to ourselves so as to not influence others.

  • Attempting to use the SCA cupping form.

Have fun, let’s cup these controversial coffees.

Cupping Feedback

This will not be a perfect calibration, and I failed to fill out my SCA Cupping form with you. Many apologies as I was too busy enjoying conversations and instructing on cupping and curiosity. However, the quick feedback and insights below will help launch us into our next section discussing species, processing, grades, roasts, etc.

 

Robusta

  • Organic India Araku Valley

    • Earthy, Corn Nuts, Smoke, Roasty, Phenol, Green Grass, Metallic, Nutty

  • Vietnam Lam Dong “Winey”

    • Dried Fruit, Fig, Peanuts, Hazelnut, Dark Chocolate, More mellow than India

  • Uganda Screen 15

    • Metallic, Bitter, Oil, Petrol, Rubber

Arabica

  • Commercial India Kent/Timor Blend

    • Earthy, Woody, Tamarind, Spice, Orange, Bell Pepper, Cherry

  • Specialty anaerobic honey Honduras

    • Fruity, Bright, High Lemon Citrus Acidity, Sweet

  • Specialty anaerobic wet hulled Sumatra

    • High Complex Acidity, Tabasco, Cheese, Herbal Tea, Sweet


Coffee Species

In general Arabica Coffees will have much more sweetness and acidity than equivalent Robusta Canephora Coffees. Though both are a part of the same family: Rubiaceae, they are unique species, growing in different climates as different trees with differing fruit and seeds (coffee).

The Cafe Imports Coffee Family Tree is a fantastic resource to visually see how the coffee species are related but distinct from one another. Our understanding of Arabica is that it naturally evolved first in the region of Ethiopia while Robusta Canephora evolved further southwest on the borders of Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo. 

As different trees growing in different regions the coffee flavor profiles can be generalized with the following distinctions. As the name suggests “Robusta” is more “Robust” as a tree and flavor profile than Arabica.



Roasting, Processing and Other Impacts

Coffee is such a dynamic and complex fruit that we should never create hard and fast rules. While it is tempting to generalize in a manner as we did above saying “Robusta Canephora is juxtaposed with Arabica… or it is this and not this…” such generalizations are only starting points. 

As we saw from our cupping experiences there can be an array of cup qualities in a Robusta Canephora when it is more carefully screened and processed as the Vietnamese coffee was. Likewise we can see a great discrepancy between the Indian Commercial Kent/Timor blend as compared to the neighboring Sumatra wet hulled anaerobic. Many people have an idea in their mind that Sumatra (and wet hulled) coffees are lower in acid with chocolatey notes… a description that in no way fits our anaerobic wet hulled Sumatra.

We might understand processing and discuss it in “waves” as we do with first, second or third wave coffee. First wave processing was very much driven by climate and natural resources available to coffee growers. The challenge of drying and the abundance of water led Indonesia’s islands to pioneer wet hull processing while the abundant sun and drying conditions led many nations (such as the horn of Africa) to traditionally dry their coffees. These traditional processing methods have created strong expectations and stereotypes in our coffee buying, roasting and cupping work.

Today we are in a new and exciting wave of great experimental processing. Regions that traditionally dried coffee are washing. Regions that traditionally washed coffees or used water for processing are using more natural and mechanical drying methods. Even further experimental yeasts and anaerobic conditions are breaking down the walls of our sensory expectations.

We are in a great “new wave” of coffee processing

We need not speak much about roasting, except that the roasters job is to protect and accentuate the qualities inherent in the green coffee and through the skill of processing. The roaster may preserve and highlight or the roaster may destroy or cover over those aspects. In respect to our SCA cupping form (to come full circle) we should roast the coffees accurately and consistently to complete first crack at or near a whole bean color of 58 with a ground color of 63 on the Agtron Gourmet Color scale.

Coffee roasters should protect and accentuate the qualities of the green.


Closing Thoughts, Questions & Answers

In this presentation, I have shared many things which could be construed as “rules”, especially in regard to Arabica vs. Robusa Canephora. However, the world of coffee is dynamic and ever changing, so instead we will continue to be humble and open in our exploration together. 

It’s question and answer time. I’d love to hear your thoughts, curiosities and struggles. We can dialogue in the chat here or elsewhere when you find this online. 

Thank you for your time on this topic!

If you would like to connect on this topic or with Specialty Coffee Training programs please reach out. My  email list provides coupons and course information with link: http://eepurl.com/cZU5R1 

Instagram @HowToCoffeePro 


Make Life Better my friends!

Updated Cohort Calls Model for HowToCoffeePro and SCA Training

Hey Friends!

Adam at ROCC Coffee at SCA.Training and HowToCoffeePro. I have an exciting announcement if you are a new learner on the fence or one of our alumni. So, stay tuned and be sure to pay attention.

First, you want to ensure that you are on our: Email List so that you get every announcement about new course offerings, the cohort calls and the Live social media sessions that we are going to be having.

So here’s the update: all of our courses that had been self-paced and self-directed with one-on-one coaching are now moving to a more dynamic cohort model. 

SCA Training International Cohort!

To provide you with distance learning convenience with a cohort team and class experience. This is something we’ve been working on for a long time to build, and in part we just needed to have a greater number of alumni and students. And now we’re there.


As of August 1, 2022 we want you, we want new learners to watch for the Open-Enrollment window of time. This is the open enrollment when you can join into a course. The first course, for example, is going to be Sensory Skills Foundation, and it’s going to be open for 10 days. Sensory Skills Foundation, all the new learners should join from August 1st - 10th.

Now, these will be changing and updated by email.
Every student who joins this course will be able to start your study, work on your practicals for the course and you may even have time to complete the entire course. Wait for the announcement for our first Google Meeting and class call. All of our new students, that first cohort are going to be invited.

You need to attend the call, just like you attend your class in order to keep progressing. We also are going to invite in our alumni.

We’ve got dozens… hundreds of students who have taken specific courses over the past years, we want them to come in and to join your course. Not only will you be able to ask me questions and to interact with your classmates in that meeting.

We want the alumni to share with you what it’s like to go through that course and take steps in their career and in their coffee business.

Open Enrollment will close and you’ll have to wait to the next class to get into the next cohort. Yet, once you’re an alumni, if you took this course last year, you’re always a part of that group. So every time a new cohort joins you’ll alway be able to join. 

We’ll be cupping, we’ll be roasting, we’ll be looking at equipment. Once you start this program (as long as you want to stick around) we’re going to keep developing and creating meetings with classes for you to visit.

We’ll be sending those out by social media and sharing those by email so be sure to:

Those are going to be the three hot places to be, though more may be coming, and we’ll be sure to share the news. 

If you’ve been thinking about joining an online SCA course and if you’ve been asking, “what’s the online experience going to be like?” This is the time, it’s going to be rich and it’s going to be flexible and it’s going to be dynamic with an international cohort from around the world. 

Once you join, you’re a part of our Community of HowToCoffeePro alumni, so come on back alumni, please join us for these calls, watch for the announcements, join in on the Instagram lives. We would love for you to speak into these topics. Tell us about your company, tell us about your career and the challenges you have faced and overcome.

We need to give hope to the next generation of coffee professionals. That’s what HowToCoffeePro is all about: giving you the how to skills to become a coffee professional and Make Life Better.

I can’t wait to see you in class! 

Come on, let’s go.

Perspectives EP03 with Kenean & Tamiru

Perspectives EP03 with Kenean & Tamiru

Perspectives in Coffee Interview with Kenean Dukamo of Daye Bensa and Tamiru Tadesse of Alo Coffee.

Join us as we unpack a number of fun topics surrounding specialty coffee, Ethiopia, our CQI Q Grader Arabica course, roaster buyer advice and more with two up and coming stars creating change and impact for our industry.