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Coffee Flavor Terminology

Varietal and Processing-Related Terms

These adjectives relate mostly to the origin of the coffee and the method of processing it
(dry, wet, or both):

Acidity. Acidity in relation to taste has nothing to do with acidity in terms of the gnawing
pain in your stomach. Acidity in coffee might be described by terms like bright, clear,
snappy, dry, clean, winey, etc. Coffees without acidity tend to taste flat and dull, like flat
soda. Acidity is to coffee what dryness is to wine. Different varietals s will possess
different kinds of acidity, like the wine like high notes of some African coffees versus the
crisp clear notes of high grown coffees from the Americas. Unpleasant acidy flavors may
register as sourness. Dark roasts tend to flatten out acidity. This is a key term in coffee
tasting!

Aroma. The aromatics of a coffee greatly influence its flavor profile, and comes from the
perception of the gases released by brewed coffee. Aroma is greatest in the middle roasts
and is quickly overtaken by carbony smells in darker roasts. Green beans can also have a
distinct aroma that may hint at their cup qualities.

Balance. A coffee that has several attributes present but does not have one that
overpowers others, might be called balanced or mellow. If it simply lacks strong
attributes in any significant amount it might be called dull.

Body. Body is the perceived heaviness of a coffee, sensed on the back of the palate.
Extremely light roasts and extremely dark roasts have reduced body, but the term is
determined by the type of coffee too. Distinguish between body and the thickness of
some brewing methods, like Presspot coffee, where a lot of fine matter floats in the cup
after pressing, or Espresso, where a lot of coffee oils are present in a small quantity of
liquid. conversely, if you brew using too little coffee, or too course a grind, the result will
be light on body.

Clean. The opposite of wild coffees. Clean-tasting coffees are free of defects, shadow
undertones, or varietal distractions.

Complexity. Complexity relates to the co-presence of attributes in a coffee. Acidity,


body, earthiness, sweetness, etc., combine to make a coffee complex. Varietals are often
blended to increase their complexity.

Flavor. Just a general term to describe the overall impression you get from a coffee.

Musty, Dirty, Rioy, Rough. A bunch of bad words. The first two terms relate to poor
storage conditions, improper aging, or unpleasant earthiness. "Rioy" is an industry term
for harshness, (pronounced ree-o-ee after Rio De Janiero), like poor quality low-grown
Brazilian arabicas.
Spicy. Underlying "spicy" accent, either aromatic or flavorful. It might relate to the
coffee being natural, the character of the acidity or the two combined. Examples are some
Ethiopian and Guatemalan coffees.

Wild, Earthy, or Natural. Relates mostly to the processing method used, when the fruit
of the coffee cherry is allowed to dry on the beans before removal. Earthiness can also be
detected, I presume, based on the soils the coffee grows in (there are earthy Indonesian
coffees that are wet processed). Earthiness can quickly become dirtiness. Dirty coffee is
unpleasant. The winey flavors of some wild coffees is called sour when it becomes
unpleasant.

Roast-Related Terms

Roast flavors exist alongside varietal flavors, although they often can mask or destroy
them.

Sweet. Sweet refers to the presence of some carmelly flavors developed in a Full City
type roast, in balance with other characteristics of a coffee. An overall pleasantness and
balance achieved by good roasting that is sensitive to the varietal character of the bean.
Sweet might also refer simply to a varietal characteristic, also called soft, mild or mellow.

Baked or Bready. Under-roasted coffees that haven't developed their character, or


coffees that simply sat in the roaster too long without enough heat. It can also refers to
scorched coffees where the outside of the bean is browned and the inside is under-
roasted. There's a particular parched taste that can come with under-roasting too, as with
a recent batch of Ugandan Bugisu I roasted recently.

Bittersweet. The bittersweetness of a coffee develops as the roast gets darker and
eventually overpowers other flavors. It dark roasts, acidity is reduced until completely
absent, while the carmelly taste of burt sugars form the stimulating bittersweetness. This
is a newer term but I like the way it refers to the strong flavors of dark chocolate. Its also
the quality people love about Peets and Starbucks blended coffees.

Burnt: Either the pleasant flavor of Dark French or Spanish roasts, or the flat taste of
burnt rubber in your mouth, depending on how you view such things.

Other terms may apply related to brewing and serving attributes or problems. Make up a
few.

Roast Names
Here is Sweet Maria's list of roast names from lightest to darkest:
1. Light Cinnamon
Very light brown, dry , tastes like toasted grain with distinct sour tones, baked, bready
2. Cinnamon
Light brown and dry, still toasted grain with distinct sour acidy tones
3. New England
Moderate light brown , still sour but not bready, the norm for cheap Eastern U.S. coffee
4. American or Light
Medium light brown, the traditional norm for the Eastern U.S .
5. City, or Medium
Medium brown, the norm for most of the Western US, good to taste varietal character of
a bean.
6. Full City
Medium dark brown with some slight oily drops, good for varietal character with a little
bittersweet.
7. Light French, or Espresso
Moderate dark brown with oily drops, light surface oil, more bittersweet, caramelly
flavor, acidity muted.
8. French
Dark brown oily, shiny with oil, also popular for espresso; burned undertones, acidity
diminished
9. Italian or Dark French
Very dark brown very shiny, burned tones become more distinct, acidity almost gone.
10. Spanish
Very dark brown, nearly black and very shiny, charcoal tones dominate, flat.

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