Making Aromatic Powder From Green Coffee Beans
Coffee doesn’t exist in the shape that we are used to buying it in at the stores. Coffee comes in the shape of green coffee beans that grow on the coffee plant. These green coffee beans are then picked up from coffee plantations and are sent to places to be roasted, ground and finely crushed to make the coffee powder that you are use to purchasing at your neighborhood shop. The strategies that Green Coffee Beans Endure there’s a process that these green coffee beans must go thru before they become coffee powder.
First the beans must be picked from the coffee plantations. This is mostly done by hand by workers who receive payment for each basket that they pick. Then, since coffee beans have a fruity flesh that at once wraps round the coffee bean, when they are gathered this flesh must be removed immediately. This is done by soaking the beans, scouring them and then mechanically rubbing the bean.
Once the green coffee bean is free from its fruity flesh it is then cleaned with water. This is done to shed any of the fruity flesh which is going to remain sticking to it, as well as any extra sugars that are on it. The beans are then dried by spreading them over a gigantic concrete or rock plane where they’re dried by a combo of the air and direct daylight. After the beans have been dried it’s time for the beans to be put into classes that are based mainly on the color and the dimensions of the coffee bean. Any beans that are darkened, rotten or damaged are removed from the other beans at that point.
When the beans are eventually dried, they are then roasted. This process is important if you would like a savory coffee. At this time, the coffee bean will basically expands to nearly twice that of what its first size was. It will also change color and density as it takes in heat. The color turns to yellow and then to a light cinnamon brown. At roughly that point the coffee beans will start to break, just like popcorn does.
As coffee is grown in different parts of the planet, varying climate conditions and other things also play a part in the way the beans are processed. The final product is then crushed into the savoury coffee powder which we are used to seeing.
Want to find more free information, Recipes, Tips and Resources, then visit Timothy Castle’s Coffee Blog.
Originally published here.
Timothy Castle