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Coffee bean

A coffee bean is a seed from the Coffea plant and the source for coffee. It is the pip inside the red or purple fruit. This fruit is often referred to as a coffee cherry, and like the cherry, it is a fruit with a pip. Even though the coffee beans are not technically beans, they are referred to as such because of their resemblance to true beans. The fruits most commonly contain two stones with their flat sides together. A small percentage of cherries contain a single seed, instead of the usual two, called a "peaberry". The peaberry occurs only between 10% and 15% of the time, and it is a fairly common (yet scientifically unproven) belief that they have more flavour than normal coffee beans.[3] Like Brazil nuts (a seed) and white rice, coffee beans consist mostly of endosperm.[4]

Coffee beans
Roasted coffee beans
Region of originHorn of Africa[1] and South Arabia[2]

The two most economically important varieties of coffee plants are the Arabica and the Robusta; approximately 60% of the coffee produced worldwide is Arabica and ~40% is Robusta.[5] Arabica beans consist of 0.8–1.4% caffeine and Robusta beans consist of 1.7–4.0% caffeine.[6] As coffee is one of the world's most widely consumed beverages, coffee beans are a major cash crop and an important export product, accounting for over 50% of some developing nations' foreign exchange earnings. This has made coffee very important in culture and food around the world.[7] In 2017, 70% of total coffee production was exported, worth US$19.9 billion.[8]The global coffee industry is massive and valued at $495.50 billion as of 2023, the biggest producer of coffee and coffee beans is Brazil.[9] Other main exporters of coffee beans are Colombia, Vietnam and Ethiopia.

History edit

Significant dates edit

  • According to legend, the coffee plant was discovered in Ethiopia by a goat herder named Kaldi around 850 AD, who observed increased physical activity in his goats after they consumed coffee beans.[10]
  • The coffee plant was first found in the mountains of Yemen. Then by 1500, it was exported to the rest of the world through the port of Mokha, Yemen.
  • First cultivation in India (Chikmagalur) – 1600
  • First cultivation in Europe – 1616
  • First cultivation in Java – 1699
  • First cultivation in Caribbean (Cuba, Hispaniola, Jamaica, Puerto Rico) – 1715–1730
  • First cultivation in South America – 1730
  • First cultivation in Dutch East Indies – 1720
  • Roasted beans first sold on retail market (Pittsburgh) – 1865
  • Important spray-drying techniques developed in 1950s, which along with freeze drying are a method to create instant coffee

Distribution edit

 
The bean belt in yellow: The 20 largest producers (2011) are in green.

Brazil produces about 45% of the world's total coffee exports. The United States imports more coffee than any other nation. As of 2015, Americans consumed approximately 400 million cups of coffee per day, making the United States the leading consumer of coffee in the world.[11]

Coffee plants grow within a defined area between the tropics of Cancer and Capricorn, termed the bean belt or coffee belt.[12][13][14][15]

Etymology edit

The Oxford English Dictionary suggests that the European languages generally appear to have gotten the name from Turkish kahveh, about 1600, perhaps through Italian caffè. Arab qahwah, in Turkish pronounced kahveh, the name of the infusion or beverage; said by Arab lexicographers to have originally meant "wine" or some type of wine, and to be a derivative of a verb-root qahiya "to have no appetite". Another common theory is that the name derives from Kaffa Province, Ethiopia, where the species may have originated.[16]

Coffee plant edit

 
The flower of a Singararutang coffee tree
 
Coffee berries

The coffee tree averages from 5–10 m (16–33 ft) in height. As the tree gets older, it produces less fruit and slowly loses any pest- and disease-resistance. The coffee beans come from the seeds which contained in fruits from trees and shrubs naturally grown in African forests. Humans produce coffee by roasting, grinding and brewing the green coffee beans.[17]

Coffee plants are often grown in rows spaced apart depending on the desired density chosen by the farmer. Some farmers plant other trees, such as shade trees or other cash-crop trees, such as orange trees around them or plant the coffee on the sides of hills, because they need specific conditions to flourish. Ideally, Arabica coffee beans are grown at temperatures between 15 and 24 °C (59 and 75 °F) and Robusta between 24 and 30 °C (75 and 86 °F) and receive between 500 and 3,000 mm (20 and 118 in) of rainfall per year.[18] More rain is needed at the beginning of the season when the fruit is developing and less later in the season as it ripens.

Two lesser known species grown for consumption are Coffea liberica and Coffea racemosa.[19]

Processing edit

When the fruit is ripe, it is almost always handpicked, using either "selective picking", where only the ripe fruit is removed, or "strip-picking", where all of the fruit is removed from a limb all at once. Selective picking is often used to produce higher quality coffee because the cherries are picked at their ripest. Strip-picking is indiscriminate and will harvest unripe, ripe, and over-ripe fruit. To improve quality after strip-picking, the harvest must be sorted.

The Asian palm civet eats coffee berries and excretes the beans. Because the civet prefers the taste of the ripest cherries, the civet selectively harvests the cherries. Its digestive system then processes the beans by breaking down the mucilage and pulp surrounding the seed. Once the seeds are excreted by the civet, they can be harvested, processed and sold as a niche product. Once they are finally processed, these beans are called kopi luwak, and are often marketed as a rare and expensive coffee.

Two methods are primarily used to process coffee berries. The first, "wet" or "washed" process, has historically usually been carried out in Central America and areas of Africa. The flesh of the cherries is separated from the seeds and then the seeds are fermented – soaked in water for about two days. This softens the mucilage, which is a sticky pulp residue that is still attached to the seeds. Then this mucilage is washed off with water.

The "dry processing" method, cheaper and simpler, was historically used for lower-quality beans in Brazil and much of Africa, but now brings a premium when done well. Twigs and other foreign objects are separated from the berries and the fruit is then spread out in the sun on concrete, bricks or raised beds for 2–3 weeks, turned regularly for even drying.

Composition edit

 
Coffee cherry cross-section
 
Freshly harvested coffee cherries

The term "green coffee bean" refers to unroasted mature or immature coffee beans. These have been processed by wet or dry methods to remove the outer pulp and mucilage and have an intact wax layer on the outer surface. When immature, they are green. When mature, they have a brown to yellow or reddish color and typically weigh 300 to 330 mg per dried coffee bean. Nonvolatile and volatile compounds in green coffee beans, such as caffeine, deter many insects and animals from eating them. Further, both nonvolatile and volatile compounds contribute to the flavor of the coffee bean when it is roasted. Nonvolatile nitrogenous compounds (including alkaloids, trigonelline, proteins, and free amino acids) and carbohydrates are of major importance in producing the full aroma of roasted coffee and for its biological action. Since the mid-2000s, green coffee extract has been sold as a nutritional supplement and has been clinically studied for its chlorogenic acid content and for its lipolytic and weight-loss properties.

Nonvolatile alkaloids edit

 
Immature Coffea canephora berries on a tree in Goa, India

Caffeine (1,3,7-trimethylxanthine) is the alkaloid most present in green and roasted coffee beans. The content of caffeine is between 1.0% and 2.5% by weight of dry green coffee beans. The content of caffeine does not change during maturation of green coffee beans, but higher caffeine content is found in plants grown at higher altitudes.[20][21] Lower concentrations of theophylline, theobromine, paraxanthine, liberine, and methylliberine can be found. The concentration of theophylline, an alkaloid noted for its presence in green tea, is reduced during the roasting process, usually about 15 minutes at 230 °C (446 °F), whereas the concentrations of most other alkaloids are not changed.[citation needed] The solubility of caffeine in water increases with temperature and with the addition of chlorogenic acids, citric acid, or tartaric acid, all of which are present in green coffee beans. For example, 1 g (0.035 oz) of caffeine dissolves in 46 mL (1.6 US fl oz) of water at room temperature, and 5.5 mL (0.19 US fl oz) at 80 °C (176 °F).[22] The xanthine alkaloids are odorless, but have a bitter taste in water, which is masked by organic acids present in green coffee.[citation needed]

Trigonelline (N-methyl-nicotinate) is a derivative of vitamin B6 that is not as bitter as caffeine. In green coffee beans, the content is between 0.6% and 1.0%. At a roasting temperature of 230 °C (446 °F), 85% of the trigonelline is degraded to nicotinic acid, leaving small amounts of the unchanged molecule in the roasted beans.[23][24]

Proteins and amino acids edit

Proteins account for 8% to 12% of dried green coffee beans. A majority of the proteins are of the 11-S storage kind[25] (alpha – component of 32 kDa, beta – component of 22 kDa), most of which are degraded to free amino acids during maturation of green coffee beans. Further, 11-S storage proteins are degraded to their individual amino acids under roasting temperature, thus are an additional source of bitter components due to generation of Maillard reaction products.[26] High temperature and oxygen concentration and low pH degrade 11-S storage proteins of green coffee beans to low-molecular-weight peptides and amino acids. The degradation is accelerated in the presence of organic acids such as chlorogenic acids and their derivatives. Other proteins include enzymes, such as catalase and polyphenol oxidase, which are important for the maturation of green coffee beans. Mature coffee contains free amino acids (4.0 mg amino acid/g robusta coffee and up to 4.5 mg amino acid/g arabica coffee). In Coffea arabica, alanine is the amino acid with the highest concentration, i.e. 1.2 mg/g, followed by asparagine of 0.66 mg/g, whereas in C. robusta, alanine is present at a concentration of 0.8 mg/g and asparagine at 0.36 mg/g.[27][28] The free hydrophobic amino acids in fresh green coffee beans contribute to the unpleasant taste, making it impossible to prepare a desirable beverage with such compounds. In fresh green coffee from Peru, these concentrations have been determined as: isoleucine 81 mg/kg, leucine 100 mg/kg, valine 93 mg/kg, tyrosine 81 mg/kg, phenylalanine 133 mg/kg. The concentration of gamma-aminobutyric acid (a neurotransmitter) has been determined between 143 mg/kg and 703 mg/kg in green coffee beans from Tanzania.[29] Roasted coffee beans do not contain any free amino acids; the amino acids in green coffee beans are degraded under roasting temperature to Maillard products (reaction products between the aldehyde group of sugar and the alpha-amino group of the amino acids). Further, diketopiperazines, e.g. cyclo(proline-proline), cyclo(proline-leucine), and cyclo(proline-isoleucine), are generated from the corresponding amino acids, and are the major source of the bitter taste of roasted coffee.[30] The bitter flavor of diketopiperazines is perceptible at around 20 mg/liter of water. The content of diketopiperazines in espresso is about 20 to 30 mg, which is responsible for its bitterness.[31]

Carbohydrates edit

Carbohydrates make up about 50% of the dry weight of green coffee beans. The carbohydrate fraction of green coffee is dominated by polysaccharides, such as arabinogalactan, galactomannan, and cellulose, contributing to the tasteless flavor of green coffee. Arabinogalactan makes up to 17% of dry weight of green coffee beans, with a molecular weight of 90 kDa to 200 kDa. It is composed of beta-1-3-linked galactan main chains, with frequent members of arabinose (pentose) and galactose (hexose) residues at the side chains comprising immunomodulating properties by stimulating the cellular defense system (Th-1 response) of the body. Mature brown to yellow coffee beans contain fewer residues of galactose and arabinose at the side chain of the polysaccharides, making the green coffee bean more resistant to physical breakdown and less soluble in water.[32] The molecular weight of the arabinogalactan in coffee is higher than in most other plants, improving the cellular defense system of the digestive tract compared to arabinogalactan with lower molecular weight.[33] Free monosaccharides are present in mature brown to yellow-green coffee beans. The free part of monosaccharides contains sucrose (gluco-fructose) up to 9000 mg/100 g of arabica green coffee bean, a lower amount in robustas, i.e. 4500 mg/100 g. In arabica green coffee beans, the content of free glucose was 30 to 38 mg/100 g, free fructose 23 to 30 mg/100 g; free galactose 35 mg/100 g and mannitol 50 mg/100 g dried coffee beans, respectively. Mannitol is a powerful scavenger for hydroxyl radicals, which are generated during the peroxidation of lipids in biological membranes.[34]

Lipids edit

The lipids found in green coffee include: linoleic acid, palmitic acid, oleic acid, stearic acid, arachidic acid, diterpenes, triglycerides, unsaturated long-chain fatty acids, esters, and amides. The total content of lipids in dried green coffee is 11.7–14 g/100 g.[35] Lipids are present on the surface and in the interior matrix of green coffee beans. On the surface, they include derivatives of carboxylic acid-5-hydroxytryptamides with an amide bond to fatty acids (unsaturated C6 to C24) making up to 3% of total lipid content or 1200 to 1400 microgram/g dried green coffee bean. Such compounds form a wax-like cover on the surface of the coffee bean (200–300 mg lipids/100 g dried green coffee bean) protecting the interior matrix against oxidation and insects. Further, such molecules have antioxidative activity due to their chemical structure.[36] Lipids of the interior tissue are triglycerides, linoleic acid (46% of total free lipids), palmitic acid (30% to 35% of total free lipids), and esters. Arabica beans have a higher content of lipids (13.5–17.4 g lipids/100 g dried green coffee beans) than robustas (9.8–10.7 g lipids/100 g dried green coffee beans). The content of diterpenes is about 20% of the lipid fraction. The diterpenes found in green coffee include cafestol, kahweol and 16-O-methylcafestol. Some of these diterpenes have been shown in in vitro experiments to protect liver tissue against chemical oxidation.[37] In coffee oil from green coffee beans the diterpenes are esterified with saturated long chain fatty acids.

Nonvolatile chlorogenic acids edit

Chlorogenic acids belong to a group of compounds known as phenolic acids, which are antioxidants. The content of chlorogenic acids in dried green coffee beans of arabica is 65 mg/g and of robusta 140 mg/g, depending on the timing of harvesting.[38] At roasting temperature, more than 70% of chlorogenic acids are destroyed, leaving a residue less than 30 mg/g in the roasted coffee bean. In contrast to green coffee, green tea contains an average of 85 mg/g polyphenols. These chlorogenic acids could be a valuable, inexpensive source of antioxidants. Chlorogenic acids are homologous compounds comprising caffeic acid, ferulic acid and 3,4-dimethoxycinnamic acid, which are connected by an ester bond to the hydroxyl groups of quinic acid.[39] The antioxidant capacity of chlorogenic acid is more potent than of ascorbic acid (vitamin C) or mannitol, which is a selective hydroxy-radical scavenger.[40] Chlorogenic acids have a bitter taste in low concentrations such as 50 mg/L water. At higher concentrations of 1 g/L water, they have a sour taste. Chlorogenic acids increase the solubility of caffeine and are important modulators of taste.

Volatile compounds edit

Volatile compounds of green coffee beans include short-chain fatty acids, aldehydes, and nitrogen-containing aromatic molecules, such as derivatives of pyrazines (green-herbaceous-earthy odor). Briefly, such volatile compounds are responsible for the less pleasing odor and taste of green coffee versus roasted coffee. Commercial success was realized by Starbucks in creating Green Bean Refreshers using a process that primarily isolates the caffeine from the green beans but does not actually use steeped liquid from the beans.[41] Many consumers experiment with creating green bean "extract" by steeping green coffee beans in hot water. Often, the recommended times of steeping (20 minutes to 1 hour) extract too much caffeine to provide a pleasant taste. A steeping time of 12 minutes or under provides a more palatable liquid that can be used as a base for a drink containing more of the nutrients and less caffeine that using just isolated caffeine extract.[42] The alkaline stock base that results can be paired with acidic or fruity extracts, with or without sweetener, to mask the vegetable-like taste of the extract.

When green coffee beans are roasted, other molecules with the typical pleasant aroma of coffee are generated, which are not present in fresh green coffee. During roasting, the major part of the unpleasant-tasting volatile compounds are neutralised. Unfortunately, other important molecules such as antioxidants and vitamins present in green coffee are destroyed. Volatile compounds with nauseating odor for humans have been identified, including acetic acid (pungent, unpleasant odor), propionic acid (odor of sour milk, or butter), butanoic acid (odor of rancid butter, present in green coffee with 2 mg/100 g coffee beans), pentanoic acid (unpleasant fruity flavor, present in green coffee at 40 mg/100 g in coffee beans), hexanoic acid (fatty-rancid odor), heptanoic acid (fatty odor), octanoic acid (repulsive oily rancid odor); nonanoic acid (mild nut-like fatty odor); decanoic acid (sour repulsive odor), and derivatives of such fatty acids – 3-methyl-valeric acid (sour, green-herbaceous, unpleasant odor), acetaldehyde (pungent-nauseating odor, even when highly diluted, present in dried green coffee beans at concentrations of about 5 mg/kg), propanal (choking effect on respiratory system, penetrating-nauseating), butanal (nauseating effect, present in dried green coffee beans at 2–7 mg/kg), or pentanal (very repulsive nauseating effect).[43]

References edit

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External links edit

  •   Media related to Coffee beans at Wikimedia Commons

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This article is about the coffee bean seed For the coffee chain see The Coffee Bean amp Tea Leaf A coffee bean is a seed from the Coffea plant and the source for coffee It is the pip inside the red or purple fruit This fruit is often referred to as a coffee cherry and like the cherry it is a fruit with a pip Even though the coffee beans are not technically beans they are referred to as such because of their resemblance to true beans The fruits most commonly contain two stones with their flat sides together A small percentage of cherries contain a single seed instead of the usual two called a peaberry The peaberry occurs only between 10 and 15 of the time and it is a fairly common yet scientifically unproven belief that they have more flavour than normal coffee beans 3 Like Brazil nuts a seed and white rice coffee beans consist mostly of endosperm 4 Coffee beansRoasted coffee beansRegion of originHorn of Africa 1 and South Arabia 2 The two most economically important varieties of coffee plants are the Arabica and the Robusta approximately 60 of the coffee produced worldwide is Arabica and 40 is Robusta 5 Arabica beans consist of 0 8 1 4 caffeine and Robusta beans consist of 1 7 4 0 caffeine 6 As coffee is one of the world s most widely consumed beverages coffee beans are a major cash crop and an important export product accounting for over 50 of some developing nations foreign exchange earnings This has made coffee very important in culture and food around the world 7 In 2017 70 of total coffee production was exported worth US 19 9 billion 8 The global coffee industry is massive and valued at 495 50 billion as of 2023 the biggest producer of coffee and coffee beans is Brazil 9 Other main exporters of coffee beans are Colombia Vietnam and Ethiopia Contents 1 History 1 1 Significant dates 1 2 Distribution 2 Etymology 3 Coffee plant 3 1 Processing 4 Composition 4 1 Nonvolatile alkaloids 4 2 Proteins and amino acids 4 3 Carbohydrates 4 4 Lipids 4 5 Nonvolatile chlorogenic acids 4 6 Volatile compounds 5 References 6 External linksHistory editMain article History of coffee Significant dates edit According to legend the coffee plant was discovered in Ethiopia by a goat herder named Kaldi around 850 AD who observed increased physical activity in his goats after they consumed coffee beans 10 The coffee plant was first found in the mountains of Yemen Then by 1500 it was exported to the rest of the world through the port of Mokha Yemen First cultivation in India Chikmagalur 1600 First cultivation in Europe 1616 First cultivation in Java 1699 First cultivation in Caribbean Cuba Hispaniola Jamaica Puerto Rico 1715 1730 First cultivation in South America 1730 First cultivation in Dutch East Indies 1720 Roasted beans first sold on retail market Pittsburgh 1865 Important spray drying techniques developed in 1950s which along with freeze drying are a method to create instant coffeeDistribution edit nbsp The bean belt in yellow The 20 largest producers 2011 are in green Brazil produces about 45 of the world s total coffee exports The United States imports more coffee than any other nation As of 2015 Americans consumed approximately 400 million cups of coffee per day making the United States the leading consumer of coffee in the world 11 Coffee plants grow within a defined area between the tropics of Cancer and Capricorn termed the bean belt or coffee belt 12 13 14 15 Etymology editThe Oxford English Dictionary suggests that the European languages generally appear to have gotten the name from Turkish kahveh about 1600 perhaps through Italian caffe Arab qahwah in Turkish pronounced kahveh the name of the infusion or beverage said by Arab lexicographers to have originally meant wine or some type of wine and to be a derivative of a verb root qahiya to have no appetite Another common theory is that the name derives from Kaffa Province Ethiopia where the species may have originated 16 Coffee plant edit nbsp The flower of a Singararutang coffee tree nbsp Coffee berriesThe coffee tree averages from 5 10 m 16 33 ft in height As the tree gets older it produces less fruit and slowly loses any pest and disease resistance The coffee beans come from the seeds which contained in fruits from trees and shrubs naturally grown in African forests Humans produce coffee by roasting grinding and brewing the green coffee beans 17 Coffee plants are often grown in rows spaced apart depending on the desired density chosen by the farmer Some farmers plant other trees such as shade trees or other cash crop trees such as orange trees around them or plant the coffee on the sides of hills because they need specific conditions to flourish Ideally Arabica coffee beans are grown at temperatures between 15 and 24 C 59 and 75 F and Robusta between 24 and 30 C 75 and 86 F and receive between 500 and 3 000 mm 20 and 118 in of rainfall per year 18 More rain is needed at the beginning of the season when the fruit is developing and less later in the season as it ripens Two lesser known species grown for consumption are Coffea liberica and Coffea racemosa 19 Processing edit Further information Processing of coffee When the fruit is ripe it is almost always handpicked using either selective picking where only the ripe fruit is removed or strip picking where all of the fruit is removed from a limb all at once Selective picking is often used to produce higher quality coffee because the cherries are picked at their ripest Strip picking is indiscriminate and will harvest unripe ripe and over ripe fruit To improve quality after strip picking the harvest must be sorted The Asian palm civet eats coffee berries and excretes the beans Because the civet prefers the taste of the ripest cherries the civet selectively harvests the cherries Its digestive system then processes the beans by breaking down the mucilage and pulp surrounding the seed Once the seeds are excreted by the civet they can be harvested processed and sold as a niche product Once they are finally processed these beans are called kopi luwak and are often marketed as a rare and expensive coffee Two methods are primarily used to process coffee berries The first wet or washed process has historically usually been carried out in Central America and areas of Africa The flesh of the cherries is separated from the seeds and then the seeds are fermented soaked in water for about two days This softens the mucilage which is a sticky pulp residue that is still attached to the seeds Then this mucilage is washed off with water The dry processing method cheaper and simpler was historically used for lower quality beans in Brazil and much of Africa but now brings a premium when done well Twigs and other foreign objects are separated from the berries and the fruit is then spread out in the sun on concrete bricks or raised beds for 2 3 weeks turned regularly for even drying Composition edit nbsp Coffee cherry cross section nbsp Freshly harvested coffee cherriesThe term green coffee bean refers to unroasted mature or immature coffee beans These have been processed by wet or dry methods to remove the outer pulp and mucilage and have an intact wax layer on the outer surface When immature they are green When mature they have a brown to yellow or reddish color and typically weigh 300 to 330 mg per dried coffee bean Nonvolatile and volatile compounds in green coffee beans such as caffeine deter many insects and animals from eating them Further both nonvolatile and volatile compounds contribute to the flavor of the coffee bean when it is roasted Nonvolatile nitrogenous compounds including alkaloids trigonelline proteins and free amino acids and carbohydrates are of major importance in producing the full aroma of roasted coffee and for its biological action Since the mid 2000s green coffee extract has been sold as a nutritional supplement and has been clinically studied for its chlorogenic acid content and for its lipolytic and weight loss properties Nonvolatile alkaloids edit nbsp Immature Coffea canephora berries on a tree in Goa IndiaCaffeine 1 3 7 trimethylxanthine is the alkaloid most present in green and roasted coffee beans The content of caffeine is between 1 0 and 2 5 by weight of dry green coffee beans The content of caffeine does not change during maturation of green coffee beans but higher caffeine content is found in plants grown at higher altitudes 20 21 Lower concentrations of theophylline theobromine paraxanthine liberine and methylliberine can be found The concentration of theophylline an alkaloid noted for its presence in green tea is reduced during the roasting process usually about 15 minutes at 230 C 446 F whereas the concentrations of most other alkaloids are not changed citation needed The solubility of caffeine in water increases with temperature and with the addition of chlorogenic acids citric acid or tartaric acid all of which are present in green coffee beans For example 1 g 0 035 oz of caffeine dissolves in 46 mL 1 6 US fl oz of water at room temperature and 5 5 mL 0 19 US fl oz at 80 C 176 F 22 The xanthine alkaloids are odorless but have a bitter taste in water which is masked by organic acids present in green coffee citation needed Trigonelline N methyl nicotinate is a derivative of vitamin B6 that is not as bitter as caffeine In green coffee beans the content is between 0 6 and 1 0 At a roasting temperature of 230 C 446 F 85 of the trigonelline is degraded to nicotinic acid leaving small amounts of the unchanged molecule in the roasted beans 23 24 Proteins and amino acids edit Proteins account for 8 to 12 of dried green coffee beans A majority of the proteins are of the 11 S storage kind 25 alpha component of 32 kDa beta component of 22 kDa most of which are degraded to free amino acids during maturation of green coffee beans Further 11 S storage proteins are degraded to their individual amino acids under roasting temperature thus are an additional source of bitter components due to generation of Maillard reaction products 26 High temperature and oxygen concentration and low pH degrade 11 S storage proteins of green coffee beans to low molecular weight peptides and amino acids The degradation is accelerated in the presence of organic acids such as chlorogenic acids and their derivatives Other proteins include enzymes such as catalase and polyphenol oxidase which are important for the maturation of green coffee beans Mature coffee contains free amino acids 4 0 mg amino acid g robusta coffee and up to 4 5 mg amino acid g arabica coffee In Coffea arabica alanine is the amino acid with the highest concentration i e 1 2 mg g followed by asparagine of 0 66 mg g whereas in C robusta alanine is present at a concentration of 0 8 mg g and asparagine at 0 36 mg g 27 28 The free hydrophobic amino acids in fresh green coffee beans contribute to the unpleasant taste making it impossible to prepare a desirable beverage with such compounds In fresh green coffee from Peru these concentrations have been determined as isoleucine 81 mg kg leucine 100 mg kg valine 93 mg kg tyrosine 81 mg kg phenylalanine 133 mg kg The concentration of gamma aminobutyric acid a neurotransmitter has been determined between 143 mg kg and 703 mg kg in green coffee beans from Tanzania 29 Roasted coffee beans do not contain any free amino acids the amino acids in green coffee beans are degraded under roasting temperature to Maillard products reaction products between the aldehyde group of sugar and the alpha amino group of the amino acids Further diketopiperazines e g cyclo proline proline cyclo proline leucine and cyclo proline isoleucine are generated from the corresponding amino acids and are the major source of the bitter taste of roasted coffee 30 The bitter flavor of diketopiperazines is perceptible at around 20 mg liter of water The content of diketopiperazines in espresso is about 20 to 30 mg which is responsible for its bitterness 31 Carbohydrates edit Carbohydrates make up about 50 of the dry weight of green coffee beans The carbohydrate fraction of green coffee is dominated by polysaccharides such as arabinogalactan galactomannan and cellulose contributing to the tasteless flavor of green coffee Arabinogalactan makes up to 17 of dry weight of green coffee beans with a molecular weight of 90 kDa to 200 kDa It is composed of beta 1 3 linked galactan main chains with frequent members of arabinose pentose and galactose hexose residues at the side chains comprising immunomodulating properties by stimulating the cellular defense system Th 1 response of the body Mature brown to yellow coffee beans contain fewer residues of galactose and arabinose at the side chain of the polysaccharides making the green coffee bean more resistant to physical breakdown and less soluble in water 32 The molecular weight of the arabinogalactan in coffee is higher than in most other plants improving the cellular defense system of the digestive tract compared to arabinogalactan with lower molecular weight 33 Free monosaccharides are present in mature brown to yellow green coffee beans The free part of monosaccharides contains sucrose gluco fructose up to 9000 mg 100 g of arabica green coffee bean a lower amount in robustas i e 4500 mg 100 g In arabica green coffee beans the content of free glucose was 30 to 38 mg 100 g free fructose 23 to 30 mg 100 g free galactose 35 mg 100 g and mannitol 50 mg 100 g dried coffee beans respectively Mannitol is a powerful scavenger for hydroxyl radicals which are generated during the peroxidation of lipids in biological membranes 34 Lipids edit The lipids found in green coffee include linoleic acid palmitic acid oleic acid stearic acid arachidic acid diterpenes triglycerides unsaturated long chain fatty acids esters and amides The total content of lipids in dried green coffee is 11 7 14 g 100 g 35 Lipids are present on the surface and in the interior matrix of green coffee beans On the surface they include derivatives of carboxylic acid 5 hydroxytryptamides with an amide bond to fatty acids unsaturated C6 to C24 making up to 3 of total lipid content or 1200 to 1400 microgram g dried green coffee bean Such compounds form a wax like cover on the surface of the coffee bean 200 300 mg lipids 100 g dried green coffee bean protecting the interior matrix against oxidation and insects Further such molecules have antioxidative activity due to their chemical structure 36 Lipids of the interior tissue are triglycerides linoleic acid 46 of total free lipids palmitic acid 30 to 35 of total free lipids and esters Arabica beans have a higher content of lipids 13 5 17 4 g lipids 100 g dried green coffee beans than robustas 9 8 10 7 g lipids 100 g dried green coffee beans The content of diterpenes is about 20 of the lipid fraction The diterpenes found in green coffee include cafestol kahweol and 16 O methylcafestol Some of these diterpenes have been shown in in vitro experiments to protect liver tissue against chemical oxidation 37 In coffee oil from green coffee beans the diterpenes are esterified with saturated long chain fatty acids Nonvolatile chlorogenic acids edit Chlorogenic acids belong to a group of compounds known as phenolic acids which are antioxidants The content of chlorogenic acids in dried green coffee beans of arabica is 65 mg g and of robusta 140 mg g depending on the timing of harvesting 38 At roasting temperature more than 70 of chlorogenic acids are destroyed leaving a residue less than 30 mg g in the roasted coffee bean In contrast to green coffee green tea contains an average of 85 mg g polyphenols These chlorogenic acids could be a valuable inexpensive source of antioxidants Chlorogenic acids are homologous compounds comprising caffeic acid ferulic acid and 3 4 dimethoxycinnamic acid which are connected by an ester bond to the hydroxyl groups of quinic acid 39 The antioxidant capacity of chlorogenic acid is more potent than of ascorbic acid vitamin C or mannitol which is a selective hydroxy radical scavenger 40 Chlorogenic acids have a bitter taste in low concentrations such as 50 mg L water At higher concentrations of 1 g L water they have a sour taste Chlorogenic acids increase the solubility of caffeine and are important modulators of taste Volatile compounds edit Volatile compounds of green coffee beans include short chain fatty acids aldehydes and nitrogen containing aromatic molecules such as derivatives of pyrazines green herbaceous earthy odor Briefly such volatile compounds are responsible for the less pleasing odor and taste of green coffee versus roasted coffee Commercial success was realized by Starbucks in creating Green Bean Refreshers using a process that primarily isolates the caffeine from the green beans but does not actually use steeped liquid from the beans 41 Many consumers experiment with creating green bean extract by steeping green coffee beans in hot water Often the recommended times of steeping 20 minutes to 1 hour extract too much caffeine to provide a pleasant taste A steeping time of 12 minutes or under provides a more palatable liquid that can be used as a base for a drink containing more of the nutrients and less caffeine that using just isolated caffeine extract 42 The alkaline stock base that results can be paired with acidic or fruity extracts with or without sweetener to mask the vegetable like taste of the extract When green coffee beans are roasted other molecules with the typical pleasant aroma of coffee are generated which are not present in fresh green coffee During roasting the major part of the unpleasant tasting volatile compounds are neutralised Unfortunately other important molecules such as antioxidants and vitamins present in green coffee are destroyed Volatile compounds with nauseating odor for humans have been identified including acetic acid pungent unpleasant odor propionic acid odor of sour milk or butter butanoic acid odor of rancid butter present in green coffee with 2 mg 100 g coffee beans pentanoic acid unpleasant fruity flavor present in green coffee at 40 mg 100 g in coffee beans hexanoic acid fatty rancid odor heptanoic acid fatty odor octanoic acid repulsive oily rancid odor nonanoic acid mild nut like fatty odor decanoic acid sour repulsive odor and derivatives of such fatty acids 3 methyl valeric acid sour green herbaceous unpleasant odor acetaldehyde pungent nauseating odor even when highly diluted present in dried green coffee beans at concentrations of about 5 mg kg propanal choking effect on respiratory system penetrating nauseating butanal nauseating effect present in dried green coffee beans at 2 7 mg kg or pentanal very repulsive nauseating effect 43 References edit Souza Richard M 2008 Plant Parasitic Nematodes of Coffee Springer p 3 ISBN 978 1 4020 8720 2 Weinberg Bennett Alan Bealer Bonnie K 2001 The World of Caffeine The Science and Culture of the World s Most Popular Drug New York Routledge p 3 4 ISBN 978 0 415 92722 2 Retrieved 18 November 2015 Peaberry Coffee Beans Speciality Coffee Drinkers Guide ilovebuttercoffee com Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 1 Dec 2016 Arabica and Robusta Coffee Plant Coffee Research Institute Retrieved 25 August 2011 Coffee World Markets and Trade PDF United States Department of Agriculture Foreign Agricultural Service June 16 2017 Retrieved December 8 2017 Botanical Aspects International Coffee Organization Archived from the original on 3 October 2011 Retrieved 25 August 2011 The Story of Coffee International Coffee Organization Archived from the original on 3 October 2011 Retrieved 25 August 2011 Voora V Bermudez S Larrea C 2019 Global Market Report Coffee State of Sustainability Initiatives Archived from the original on 2021 01 27 33 Buzzing Coffee Industry Statistics 2023 Cafes Consumption And Market Trends Zippia 2023 03 19 Retrieved 2023 12 24 The history of coffee National Coffee Association of the United States Retrieved 2020 06 24 Coffee Statistics 2015 E Imports Retrieved 15 February 2016 Klos Beth The Coffee Bean Not a Fiend www brighamandwomens org Retrieved 16 February 2017 Soin Eija September 2005 Land use change patterns and livelihood dynamics on the slopes of Mt Kilimanjaro Tanzania Agricultural Systems 85 3 306 323 Bibcode 2005AgSys 85 306S doi 10 1016 j agsy 2005 06 013 Lamb HH 1977 Climate present past and future Vol 2 p 681 ISBN 0 06 473881 7 Sevey Glenn C 1907 Bean Culture A Practical Treatise on the Production and Marketing of Beans Orange Judd Company ASIN B000863SS2 Souza Richard M 2008 Plant Parasitic Nematodes of Coffee Springer p 3 ISBN 978 1 4020 8720 2 Farah Adriana Ferreira dos Santos Thiago 2015 01 01 Preedy Victor R ed Chapter 1 The Coffee Plant and Beans An Introduction Coffee in Health and Disease Prevention San Diego Academic Press pp 5 10 doi 10 1016 b978 0 12 409517 5 00001 2 ISBN 978 0 12 409517 5 retrieved 2023 04 20 Major coffee producers productsyoucantrefuse com 2015 Retrieved 25 September 2015 Rare coffee plant could help communities video edition cnn com 5 January 2015 Clifford MN Kazi M 1987 The influence of coffee bean maturity on the content of chlorogenic acids caffeine and trigonelline Food Chemistry 26 59 69 doi 10 1016 0308 8146 87 90167 1 Girma Bealu Gure Abera Wedajo Feyisa 2020 08 12 Influence of Altitude on Caffeine 5 Caffeoylquinic Acid and Nicotinic Acid Contents of Arabica Coffee Varieties Journal of Chemistry 2020 e3904761 doi 10 1155 2020 3904761 ISSN 2090 9063 The Merck Index 13th Edition Trigonelline in Coffee www coffeechemistry com Retrieved 2021 06 25 Varnam A H 1999 Beverages technology chemistry and microbiology Jane P Sutherland Gaithersburg Maryland Aspen ISBN 0 8342 1310 9 OCLC 40941014 Bau Sandra M T Mazzafera Paulo Santoro Luiz G 2001 Seed storage proteins in coffee Revista Brasileira de Fisiologia Vegetal 13 1 33 40 doi 10 1590 S0103 31312001000100004 Montavon P Duruz E Rumo G Pratz G April 2003 Evolution of green coffee protein profiles with maturation and relationship to coffee cup quality J Agric Food Chem 51 8 2328 34 doi 10 1021 jf020831j PMID 12670177 Arnold U Ludwig E Kuhn R Moschwitzer U 1994 Analysis of free amino acids in green coffee beans Zeitschrift fur Lebensmittel Untersuchung und Forschung 199 1 22 25 doi 10 1007 BF01192946 PMID 8067059 S2CID 36134388 Murkovic M Derler K November 2006 Analysis of amino acids and carbohydrates in green coffee J Biochem Biophys Methods 69 1 2 25 32 doi 10 1016 j jbbm 2006 02 001 PMID 16563515 Teutsch I A 2004 Einfluss der Rohkaffeeverarbeitung auf Aromastoffveranderungen in gerosteten Kaffeebohnen sowie im Kaffeebetrank PDF PhD Department of Chemistry Technical University Munich Germany Ginz M 2001 Bittere Diketopiperazine und chlorogensaurederivate in Roestkaffee PhD Technical University Carolo Wilhelminia Brunswig Germany Fleming Amy 9 May 2012 How to make the perfect espresso The Guardian Archived from the original on 24 March 2016 Retrieved March 17 2016 Redgwell RJ Curti D Rogers J Nicolas P Fischer M June 2003 Changes to the galactose mannose ratio in galactomannans during coffee bean Coffea arabica L development implications for in vivo modification of galactomannan synthesis Planta 217 2 316 26 Bibcode 2003Plant 217 316R doi 10 1007 s00425 003 1003 x PMID 12783340 S2CID 3011043 Gotoda N and Iwai K 2006 Arabinogalactan isolated from coffee seeds indicates immunomodulating properties pp 116 20 in Association for Science and Information on Coffee ASIC 21st International Conference on Coffee Science 11 15 September 2006 Montpellier France Tressel R Holzer M Kamperschroer H 1983 Bildung von Aromastoffenin Roestkaffee in Abhaengigkeit vom Gehalt an freien Aminosaeren und reduzierenden Zuckern 10th International Colloquium Chemicum Coffee Salvador Bahia 11 October to 14 Oct ASIC pp 279 92 Roffi J Corte dos Santos A Mexia J T Busson F Miagrot M 1973 Cafe verts et torrefiesde l Angola Etude chimique 5th International Colloquium Chemicum Coffee Lisboa 14 June to 19 June 1971 ASIC pp 179 200 Clifford MN 1985 Chemical and physical aspects of green coffee and coffee products In Clifford MN Wilson KC eds Coffee botany biochemistry and production of beans and beverage London Croom Helm AVI pp 305 74 ISBN 0 7099 0787 7 Lee KJ Jeong HG September 2007 Protective effects of kahweol and cafestol against hydrogen peroxide induced oxidative stress and DNA damage Toxicol Lett 173 2 80 87 doi 10 1016 j toxlet 2007 06 008 PMID 17689207 Garg Satish K 2021 Chapter 42 Green coffee beans Nutraceuticals Second Edition Efficacy Safety and Toxicity Academic Press pp 725 748 doi 10 1016 B978 0 12 821038 3 00042 2 ISBN 9780128210383 S2CID 234240656 Clifford M N Chlorogenic acids their characterisation transformation during roasting and potential dietary significance PDF 21st International Conference on Coffee Science 11 15 September 2006 Montpellier France Association for Science and Information on Coffee ASIC pp 36 49 Morishita H Kido R 1995 Anti oxidant activities of chlorogenic acid PDF 16th international colloqu Chem Coffee Kyoto 9 14th April Starbucks Refreshers Beverages Starbucks Coffee Company Retrieved 28 January 2016 Len s Coffee How to make your own green coffee bean extract Retrieved 28 January 2016 Bessiere Thomas Yvonne Flament Ivon 2002 Coffee flavor chemistry Chichester John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 0 471 72038 0 External links edit nbsp Coffee portal nbsp Agriculture portal nbsp Drink portal nbsp Media related to Coffee beans at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Coffee bean amp oldid 1199022667, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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