Berries to Beans
Post-harvest
Drying
Storage
Thrashing
Beans to Brew
Instant Coffee
Decaf
Regular
Brewing
Espresso
Cupping
After picking, the coffee berries are ready for processing. The flowchart below shows common post-harvest processing techniques.
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VIDEOS: Floating
VIDEOS: Pulping
VIDEOS: Demucilating
by Team 01639.
This is the traditional method of processing coffee. The harvested berries are spread out to dry in sunlight, or sometimes in driers during the wet season. The techniques for drying berries are same as those used for drying beans. After 7 - 10 days, the berries are dried to 10 - 12% moisture. Then, they are stored.

SLIDESHOW:
Post-harvesting
Joe's Sustainable Farm,
India - Team 01639.
©Kraft foods Germany
and Gtz.The harvested products (including the berries, flowers, sticks and leaves) are soaked in a water tank. The over-ripe, undeveloped cherries, leaves and flowers float since they are lighter than water, and are termed "floaters". The "sinkers" include ripe and green cherries, which sink to the bottom of the tank. The floaters are sent to the patio to be dried, and then slated for internal consumption, while the sinkers are processed further.
Pulping refers to separating the beans from the berries. This is done using a pulping machine. The internal pressure of the machine is monitored to ensure that it is just right to break open the ripe, soft berries. The coffee beans that are released easily pass through a screen and are collected for further processing. Green berries cannot be pulped since they are harder. These berries are too large to pass through the screen. Together with the pulp, they pass to the end of the barrel system and will eventually be used as compost.
The mucilage is the wet, slippery outer layer of the bean. This layer is removed by friction as the beans move against each other in a machine. This process is termed "demucilating". Removing the mucilage mechanically allows the fermentation step to be shortened or even skipped, thus reducing total water consumption and processing time.
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Quiz
by Team 01639.
The mucilage is the wet, slippery outer layer of the bean. Fermentation tanks remove the mucilage by biological fermentation. The enzymes in fermentation bacteria convert the mucilage, which is made up of sugar and pectin, into acids. Fermentation time varies from 16 - 36h, depending on the acidity, temperature, and oxygen level. Over-fermentation can affect the taste of the beans; hence it is important that fermentation conditions are well controlled and monitored.
Printed matters:
“An Introduction to Good Manufacturing Practices for Post Harvest Processing of Arabica Coffee in Vietnam” - Jan. C von Enden.
Websites:
Rombouts Cyber Coffee Shop
http://www.rombouts.com/html/home.htmlCoffee Research Institute
http://www.coffeeresearch.orgInternational Coffee Organization
http://www.ico.orgGourment Coffee Shop
http://www.arabica.comIntelligentsia Coffee & Tea, Inc
http://www.intelligentsiacoffee.comINeedCoffee – The Coffee Mill
http://www.ineedcoffee.com/03/coffeemill/Stairway to Coffee
http://www.grayskies.net/honeybear
Videos:
On the Road to Quality. Made by Kraft foods Germany, Vietnam Coffee Cocoa Association VICOFA and Dtsch. Gesellschaft für technische Zusammenarbeit (Gtz).
Interview with:
Mr. Jan C. von Enden
EDE Consulting Asia Pacific
Hanoi, Vietnam