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Natural, Washed and Honey Processed coffee.

I thought we would follow on from January and have a little look at how the coffee cherry is processed once harvested. So brew yourself a cuppa and put your feet up...this is a slightly longer read but I have tried to keep it short.


There are two main methods of coffee processing; natural or washed. Another method, pulped natural or honey processed is less common but we will have a brief look into all three.


Firstly, let’s look at Natural processing; this is the oldest and original form of coffee processing. Favoured in certain areas with limited access to water resources, or due to the lower costs involved.


Once the cherries are harvested, they are sorted using flotation and winnowing techniques. The first step is to put all the cherries in water to soften and remove any floaters (now now, stop giggling!). Defective cherries have poorly formed seeds, creating air gaps so they float, denser cherries that sink are considered a higher quality so the two lots of cherries are separated and sold at different prices and to different markets.

Coffee cherries in water
The coffee cherries are then taken to a drying area out in the sun, often large, raised beds or concrete patios, where they are laid out to dry.
The natural sugars in the coffee cherry’s mucilage begin to ferment and the bean takes on the flavour. What makes natural processing challenging is not only the risk of over fermentation, where the fruit is left to dry for too long, but also the development of mould. The coffee is turned frequently to avoid this, ensuring an even drying.

Coffee cherries drying in sun
Once dry, the cherries resemble raisins, and the coffee is hulled to remove the outer layers. All the outer layers of the dried cherry are removed in one step by a hulling machine. The dried cherries are “cracked”, and the layers come clean away. Often with washed coffees, even after roasting, there can be a trace of the silverskin wherein natural coffees there is nothing, have a look at your beans next time and see if you can see any silverskin.
The whole Natural Process can take 3 – 6 weeks.

dried natural processed coffee cherries
Naturally processed coffees can have an incredible cup profile. They tend to create a very bright, vibrant, and intense cup. Often with higher sweetness, with a heavy body and notes of berries being common.


Now let’s look at Washed or Wet processed coffee. Wet processing is the most common, and popular, processing method in the coffee industry.
After the coffee cherries are picked, like in naturally processed coffee, the cherries need to be sorted to remove any unripe or defective cherries.
The next stage is to remove the pulp. The cherries are passed through a machine, these can be either manual or electrical, called a depulper. Some work by creating friction, causing the outer skin to come away, however, if the cherry isn’t ripe enough the skin may not be removed. Unripe cherries are separated and often used elsewhere for natural processing, sold for lower prices to local markets or used internally for the workers to drink.

wet processed coffee depulper
What happens next depends on the farmer. Some beans are washed immediately, removing all the mucilage, leaving just the parchment, and put out to dry. Other farmers ferment the beans in large tanks or channels of water, during which the enzymes break down the mucilage. The length of time that the beans are left to ferment varies from around 12 to 72 hours depending on factors such as altitude and temperature. However, the fermentation will affect the flavour of the bean so it must be balanced. The beans are then washed again in fresh water to remove any remaining flesh, leaving just the parchment, and put out to dry.

wet processed coffee being washed
Drying either takes place out in the open sun on large patios or raised beds to sit for a period of around 10-22 days where they are gently turned over. Or the beans are dried in large, heated mechanical dryers. Sun drying is preferred in climates with predictable sun and weather, as it requires no investment in machinery. A slower drying time contributes to greater balance and complexity in the cup. However, if space or time is an issue, then mechanical driers are used. With mechanical driers a bean can be washed and dried in 3 days!

coffee beans drying in sun
One of the biggest criticisms of washed processing is its high water usage.
The washed process is often thought of as focusing on the coffee bean itself, allowing you taste all the flavours of the origin, variety, and terroir, without the influence of the processing method.
Washed processing can result in clean, sparkling acidity, lively, fruity characteristics with perhaps just a hint of sweetness.


Still with me? Nearly there 😊

Finally, Honey Processed Coffee/ Pulped Natural.
It is most common to come across washed or natural processed coffee but there is now honey processed or pulped natural. Honey or pulped natural coffee processing, are terms that are sometimes used interchangeably. The country of origin and producer traditions often dictate whether the coffee is described as a honey or pulped natural.


Honey processing is somewhere in the middle of washed and natural processing. You remove the cherry skin but leave some mucilage on the bean as it dries. How much mucilage is removed is determined by using a demucilager, a machine that allows a custom amount to be removed. The amount of mucilage left on the bean will give you not only the intensity of the character but will also determine whether the coffee is a Yellow, Gold, Red or Black Honey. The term honey refers to the sweet, sugar rich mucilage, but also references the sweet profile of the coffees, though they do not tend to be as sweet as naturals.


The more mucilage left after being washed, the darker the colour of the beans when dried and the greater sweetness and body you can experience. White and gold honeys have very little mucilage left; red and black have significantly more. However, humidity, heat, and the oxidation of sugar all affect honey processing – and there is no exact formula.

honey processed coffee dried
“Pulped Natural” coffees will often resemble a Yellow Honey. With “Yellow Honey” beans, since more mucilage has been removed from the bean than from black and red honeys, a yellow honey coffee tends to be more balanced with a little acidity, and less body and sweetness.
Gold, Red, & Black Honey coffees, what differentiates these three is the amount of light and drying time the beans are exposed for. More humidity and a slower drying lead to black honey. Slightly less humidity leads to red, and even less to gold.
Gold honey will be dried during warm, sunny times with little humidity. This helps it to dry quickly.
Red honey, is processed under more shade to slow down the drying time. This will increase the amount of humidity the beans are exposed to. Red Honey processing should result in a sweeter cup profile compared to yellow honey, with a medium body and high acidity.
Black Honey, you leave all the mucilage on the beans during drying. And the beans are dried under lots of shade increasing drying time and humidity. This makes it the most complex and risky of all the honeys. The beans dry surrounded by lots of sugar and microorganisms. It is important to dry these coffees in the shade to control the heat and so stabilise fermentation.
For producers with the ability to control fermentation, black honeys can be worth the risk. They tend to have a sweet cup, a heavy body, and a good amount of acidity.
Green coffee with parchment
Before the raw or green beans are ready for export they need to be hulled to remove the parchment. The hulling is done mechanically in a dry mill. After hulling, the beans are graded and sorted often using by large sieves with varying hole sizes. Once the beans have been sorted and graded, they are packed into 60kg or 69kg hessian sacks, depending on the country of origin. The hessian sacks full of raw coffee beans are then packed into a shipping container and they then begin their journey to a roastery!

raw coffee sacks
So that is a very brief look into coffee processing. I hope you enjoyed it.


Now, I know what you are going to ask me....” Are your coffees washed or natural?” I am in the process of updating our shop online to give lots more information on each coffee, including whether they are washed or naturally processed. Please bear with me 😊 

Marisa 

Comments

On my way to becoming a fully fledged coffee nerd. Made possible by your fascinating blogs.

Not sure how much of this I’ll remember but most enjoyable. Jacqueline

Excellent tutorial, thank you

Many thanks for the the last couple of blogs, I have been buying coffee from you for many years and it is great to get a deeper understanding of the life of a coffee bean.
Thanks again.

Equally fascinating to the January blog. The anticipation rises as the journey progresses.

Wow, thanks Marisa, I never know that there was so much to coffee (I am an expert now, beware all my friends!!), have a great weekend and hope the business is running ok now, best regards Martin

Not surprisingly, there is a lot similarities, and some differences too with the production of chocolate

Interesting – thanks

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