What’s in a bean? (or more accurately What’s in a coffee cherry?)

Ethiopian Green Beans

Coffee with the biggest caffeine hit is likely to have come from the robusta bean type. These coffees may be more likely to have a bitter taste and perhaps heavier earthier tones. Instant coffee is more likely to have been made from robusta beans to capture more caffeine in the granules. There are also several coffee shops that favour the robusta bean.

Robusta coffee beans count for around 25 to 30% of worldwide coffee production and the tree is more hardy and grown at lower altitudes (below 1000 meters) in higher temperatures (upto 30 degrees celsius). The robusta bean may be more likely to be circular shaped and with a straight line split down the middle. It tends to be cheaper, with a less pronounced aroma but more full bodied. Robusta can vary in quality due to growing conditions and processes, and there has been a movement to upgrade the reputation of the bean with more care and attention in the growing, processing and roasting techniques. Largely though robusta beans would be more inferior coffees – but if caffeine levels are the priority then with often double the caffeine of arabica beans there are some benefits!

The higher altitude grown (often 1500 to 2000 meters asl) arabica beans are usually sweeter, more flavoursome (fruity, floral, delicate, smooth) with a more pleasing aroma. They can be oilier and darker and have a more oval elongated shape with a probable split which is more S shaped. Most likely grown at temperatures of  high teens to low twenties celsius, and with more shade (in the company of a wider biodiversity of other plants).

There are many sub-species of coffea and there is a possibility that in future increasing the genetic variation may become important to protect coffee from vulnerability to disease and climate changes.

Coffee fruits are called coffee cherries and most move through a colour cycle from green, then yellowing, to red when ripe. The seed, inside the coffee cherry is what is used to roast and create our coffee drinks. In order to ready a coffee bean for roasting it has to go through processing to remove the skin and flesh of the coffee cherry (the pulp, the parchment and the silverskin).

In fact, inside the cherry – there are normally two parts of the coffee seeds which grow with a flat face facing each other – these are the faces that feature the characteristic split in the coffee beans we see.

A coffee seed (bean) before roasting is normally a yellowish green colour and known as a green bean: once roasted they gain their brown colour.

How do we consume coffee?

Coffee Beans

Coffee is loved the world over and growing consumption in many places – but there is still a large variation in the amount of coffee consumed in different countries.

The Scandinavians are some of the highest per capita consumers of coffee, with Finland the leading nation for coffee drinking (three times more coffee is consumed by the average Fin than the average Brit).

In fact much of Europe is also far ahead of the UK in coffee consumption – Germans at almost double our intake, and our neighbours in Ireland drinking almost a third more coffee than us.

However Britain has definitely embraced coffee with greater passion over recent decades, with also a rising likelihood of consuming ethical coffee and brewed coffee (rather than instant). We’re approximately drinking 1 shot of coffee per person per day on average – but obviously the range from the coffee adicts to those who don’t go near it is very wide!

Around half of us prefer a milky coffee of some kind – perhaps a cappuccino, a latte or a flat white, while almost a third are more likely to favour a black coffee – an espresso, or black americano. Flavour shots and cold brew coffee or frappes are both niche favourites, with around one in twenty enjoying each of these types of coffee as their favourite variation.

It used to be that Tea was unquestionably Britain’s favourite beverage, but now it’s a much more close-run thing – with almost two thirds of people saying that they regularly enjoy coffee (the same proportion as for tea).

There has been a general trend that people start drinking coffee in their late teens and increase rapidly through their 20s in their consumption (perhaps this is related to the need to keep alert at work!) and the consumption remains high until people are in their early 60s. From then on consumption is not as strong, but still moderate – this could be related to a greater propensity to drink coffee in the working environment.

An alternative view could be that those of more senior years were more inclined towards a cup of tea and instant coffee and never fully embraced the coffee culture and variety of espresso based drinks that the younger half of the population have perhaps more enthusiastically embraced. If so, it would suggest that in future coffee consumption may rise in later years as people take their coffee drinking preferences through into retirement with them.