Litcius/Paper detail

Acids in coffee: A review of sensory measurements and meta-analysis of chemical composition

Sara E. Yeager, Mackenzie E. Batali, Jean‐Xavier Guinard, William D. Ristenpart

2021Critical Reviews in Food Science and Nutrition164 citationsDOI

Abstract

(robusta), for both green coffee and roasted coffee at multiple roast levels. A total of 129 publications were found to report acid concentration measurements, yielding 8,634 distinct data points. Analysis of the full data set reveals several trends. First, roasted robusta has considerably more acidic compounds than arabica with 2 to 5 times as much total OAs, and much larger amounts of formic and acetic acid. As for CGAs, in both arabica and robusta 5-CQA is the major component, and progressive roasting decreases the concentration of all CGAs. The total amount of CGA present was more dependent on roast level than the type of coffee (arabica vs. robusta). Overall, this meta-analysis suggests that the increases in certain OAs with roast level might play more of a role in the sensory profile of dark roast coffees than previously suspected.

Topics & Concepts

Coffea canephoraCoffea arabicaRoastingSensory analysisFood scienceGreen coffeeArabica coffeeChlorogenic acidChemistryCoffeaComposition (language)RubiaceaeHorticultureAcetic acidBotanyBiologyOrganic chemistryLinguisticsPhysical chemistryPhilosophyCoffee research and impactsTea Polyphenols and Effects