Coffee flavor explained

Coffee flavor wheel explained: From fruity to earthy

Coffee flavor wheel: a milestone in global sensory science

1. The birth and significance of the SCA flavor wheel

Development background: Developed by the Specialty Coffee Association of America (SCA) and World Coffee Research, updated to the current version in 2016.

Core logic: Classify the 110 flavors that humans can perceive into 9 categories, and establish a sensory coordinate system from the center (basic taste) to the periphery (specific description).

Scientific basis: Based on 1,300+ volatile compounds detected by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) technology, matching human sensory thresholds.

2. Analysis of the flavor wheel structure

First layer (core): basic classification (such as fruit, flower, sugar, nut/cocoa, spice, acid/fermentation, green plant, roasted taste, other defects).

Second layer: detailed descriptors (such as "fruit" is divided into berry, citrus, stone fruit).

Third layer (outermost layer): specific reference objects (such as "black currant" and "bergamot").

Chemical codes of 5 key odor types

1. Fruity

Chemical origin:

Esters (such as ethyl acetate): tropical fruit aroma (pineapple/mango).

Terpenes (limonene): citrus notes (orange/grapefruit).

Typical beans: Ethiopian Yirgacheffe (washed), Panama Gesha.

2. Nutty/Cocoa

Chemical origin:

Pyrazines (2-ethyl-3,5-dimethylpyrazine): roasted nut aroma (almond/hazelnut).

Furanone (maltol): milk chocolate sweetness.

Baking effect: medium-dark roasting (Agtron 55-65) is more obvious.

3. Floral

Chemical origin:

Phenylethanol: rose aroma (common in sun-dried beans).

Linalool: jasmine/lavender aroma (characteristic of washed Colombian beans).

Fragility: Light roasting has high retention and evaporates quickly within 15 minutes after grinding.

4. Fermented

Chemical origin:

Acetic acid: wine aroma/apple vinegar aroma (anaerobic fermented beans).

Butyric acid: cheese/yogurt flavor (defective when over-fermented).

Controllable application: Costa Rican black honey treatment (precise temperature control fermentation for 48 hours).

5. Earthy

Chemical origin:

Geosmin: wet soil smell (Sumatra wet planing method).

Pyrroles: humus texture (produced by old beans or improper storage).

Controversy: Mild earthy flavor increases complexity (such as Indonesian Mandheling), and excessive amount becomes musty.

Sensory tasting training: from laboratory to daily practice

1. Standardized cupping process (SCA protocol)

Grinding: 70%-75% of the particles pass through the US standard No. 20 sieve (coarse salt).

Smell the dry aroma: record the dry aroma before water injection (reflecting volatile esters).

Break the dregs and sniff: break the dregs 4 minutes after water injection, and quickly sniff to capture highly volatile substances.

Sipping: Use the "noodle sucking" method to atomize the coffee liquid to cover all taste buds on the tongue.

2. Olfactory memory library construction

Tools:

Le Nez du Café (coffee nose): 36 standard aroma bottles (such as "roasted almonds" and "black currant").

Homemade flavor packs: fresh fruit peels (orange/blueberry), spices (cardamom/cinnamon).

Training method:

Daily blind smell test (5 minutes), record associative words.

Compare the aroma differences of the same bean variety with different roasting degrees (light/medium/dark).

3. Taste map calibration

Acidity sensitivity: Test the perception threshold with citric acid (0.1%-0.3% solution).

Bitterness balance: Compare the bitterness levels of quinine (10-100ppm) and coffee.

Sweetness capture: Identify the residual sucrose (0.5%-2% concentration) in the aftertaste.

Frequently asked questions (FAQs)

Why do different people taste different flavors from the same bean?

Genetic differences: OR6A2 gene determines sensitivity to aldehydes (floral scent), and 25% of the population cannot perceive jasmine scent.

How to distinguish "fermentation aroma" from "fermentation defects"?

Time control: High-quality fermentation (such as 72-hour water washing in Kenya) has a red wine aroma; over-fermentation (>120 hours) produces a rancid smell.

Does the earthy smell mean that the coffee is of poor quality?

Not absolutely. The earthy smell of Indonesian wet-hulled Mandheling is a sign of its style, but it must be strictly distinguished from the musty smell (improper storage).

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