Coffee: Spilling the beans on quality

greenspun.com : LUSENET : Current News - Homefront Preparations : One Thread

By Jonathan Duffy BBC News Online Ever had a nasty cup of coffee? As prices of raw coffee have slumped in recent years, so has the quality of what we drink. Coffee drinkers may be swallowing ground up twigs, dust and floor sweepings as they sup their morning cup. Some coffees contain up to 20% rogue ingredients, which can also include mouldy and unripe beans.

While much of the coffee drunk in the UK is classed as "reasonable" or "high quality", there is alarm about some brands at the bottom end of the market.

And the plummeting price of raw coffee in recent years has made the problem worse.

Next week will see the introduction of the first international coffee mark, intended to raise overall standards across the world. But the depressed price of unroasted beans has forced cutbacks in the industry and some producing countries are expected to fall short of the tighter regulations.

The average coffee drinker may find it hard immediately to identify "contaminated" coffee, especially if it contains only small amounts of defective ingredients.

But high concentrations of bad beans and so-called "foreign matter" are characterised by a bitter taste. Some brands on sale in British supermarkets contain up to a fifth of ingredients "not recognised as coffee", said a source at the International Coffee Organisation (ICO).

Defective beans are nothing new to coffee producers and come in all shapes and sizes including unripe, over-ripe or fermented beans. A common problem is frost-damaged beans, known as "stinkers" because they smell bad. And this is not something for drinkers of expensive coffee to be smug about. While rogue ingredients are more likely to be found in cheaper brands of instant coffee, they have also been detected in some fresh, ground varieties.

New processing techniques have intensified the problem.

Steaming of raw coffee at the processing stage is becoming increasingly common, according to coffee importer Simon Wakefield. The process helps neutralise the taste of defective ingredients, hiding the harsh flavours.

The experience could be bitter "Producers have less money, they can't afford to pay for quality-control labour, fertilisers, insecticides and the like. They will pick whatever they have got from trees rather than take just the ripe cherries and they will process the whole lot and ship the whole lot," said Mr Wakefield.

Quality control procedures range from the relatively straight-forward - weighing beans - to more elaborate techniques - some producers use laser scanning to identify defective beans and other substandard ingredients.

Producers are now fearful that falling standards are giving coffee a bad name. Sales of coffee, the world's second most valuable commodity, after oil, have declined in countries such as the United States, Germany, the Netherlands and Spain.

Better latte than never

That led to calls for an international standard from the Speciality Coffee Association of Europe, which was adopted by the ICO, a body representing coffee exporting and importing nations.

On Tuesday delegates meeting in London for the 87th International Coffee Council will hear about plans to implement the "coffee quality-improvement programme" which comes into force next week and sets minimum standards for exportable coffee.

There are even alternative uses for poor coffee crops. These include using coffee beans in animal feed, as a form of fuel and extracting the oil for use in cosmetics.

Last week Oxfam launched a campaign to tackle the crisis in depressed coffee prices, caused by a global surplus of the commodity.

-- Anonymous, September 24, 2002

Answers

I'm still sick over the beans that "went" through the cat.....and sells for 150.00 for a quarter pound!

But Maxwell and Folgers have gone from 8.99 to 2.99 in the last yr. so I have really stocked up , they say it last for a good 10 yrs!!

-- Anonymous, September 24, 2002


went thru the cat? I thought it was a monkey.

-- Anonymous, September 25, 2002

Recently I bought a 15.6 ounce can of Maxwell House at CVS for $1.99 (special price with my CVS card, would have been $2.99 without the card). It was just awful. I've been drinking Maxwell House off and on for years, and the horrible quality was a complete surprise. This coffee doesn't even smell good in the can, a first.

-- Anonymous, September 25, 2002

The Hungarian and I have noticed a deterioration in coffee flavor at our favorite diners. Started about 6 weeks ago, give or take. I think I'll check the whole foods place, buy what they have on sale. Coffee is the one thing I splurge on--hell, if I can't have sugar in it, I HAVE to have good tasting coffee. (I still have a good few pounds in the stash.)

-- Anonymous, September 25, 2002

Moderation questions? read the FAQ