Recent Post
Coffee's Early History: The 15th and 16th Centuries.
Jun 13, 2023
Single Origin Love
Jun 12, 2023
3 Simple Tips For Making Perfect Coffee
Jan 11, 2023
Tips for Finding the Best Coffee Makers
Nov 30, 2022
Cleaning Your All Important Coffee Machines
Nov 20, 2022
Choosing good coffee beans
Nov 11, 2022
Archive
- September 2023
- June 2023
- January 2023
- November 2022
Tags
Arabica Or Robusta? Your Guide To Coffee Beans
Web Collaborator
Jan 15, 2021
If you are buying coffee beans for your business and not sure what you should be looking for, read on- this guide will help you to understand the differences between the basic types of coffee, and bust the coffee jargon, so you can decide which variety is right for you.
The two main varieties of coffee plant are arabica and robusta. Arabica originated from Ethiopia, whilst robusta came from Uganda. Both are now grown in several other regions throughout the world, and most coffee is labelled clearly to show which country and region it was grown in. Generally speaking, arabica is superior to robusta, with a much stronger and more distinct flavour- robusta can be bitter and weak-tasting- however the taste also varies depending on which region the coffee comes from, and the processes it is subjected to during growing, shipping, storing and brewing.
You will often find that coffee is described in terms similar to those you might find in wine tasting: the main three categories used are flavour (such as ‘sweet’ or ‘spicy’), aroma (such as ‘flowery’ or ‘chocolaty’), body (such as ‘medium-bodied’ or ‘full-bodied’) and acidity (which refers to how ‘sharp’ or ‘clean’ the coffee tastes, NOT to its pH).
When you buy coffee beans, you will probably buy them already roasted, however you can ‘home-roast’ them if you choose. Roasting unlocks the flavour from the bean, and the extent to which beans are roasted varies- for example, you can buy ‘medium roast’ beans, ‘Italian roast’ beans (‘Italian’ refers to the roast- it does not indicate that the beans came from Italy), and so on.
It is worth trying out different types of coffee, using the above points as a guide. You will be amazed at the range of flavors out there, and the more effort you make to try the different flavors, the more of an expert you will become.
The site publisher owns the right to republish this article for news and content purposes. Original author undisclosed. No listed author (anonymous works)Â
Â