Coffee Terms:
Acidity: The sharp lively quality characteristic of
high-grown coffee, tasted mainly at the tip of the tongue. The brisk, snappy
quality that makes coffee refreshing. It is not the same as bitter or sour and
has nothing to do with pH factors. Coffees are low in acidity, between 5 and 6
on the pH scale. Describes coffee with a pleasant sharpness, snap, and
liveliness. While a coffee low in acidity can result in a pleasant-tasting
"mellow" or "soft" cup of coffee, the complete lack of acidity will leave the
coffee tasting flat, or "dead".
Barista: A person who makes coffee drinks as a
profession.
Blend: A mixture of two or more individual varietals of
coffee.
Body: The tactile impression of the weight of the coffee in
the mouth. May range from thin to medium to full to buttery to syrupy. The sense
of heaviness or richness (mouthfeel and texture at the back of the tongue). Body
describes the depth of flavor, often in terms such as "rough" or "water". This
should be a strong, full, pleasant characteristic.
Caffeine: The drug contained in coffee. A bitter white
alkaloid derived from coffee (or tea) and used in medicine for a mild stimulant
or to treat certain kinds of headache.
Cappuccino: Cappuccino gets its name from the Italian order
of Catholic Capuchin monks, whose hooded robes resemble the drink's cap of foam
in shape and color. The frothed milk from the top of the steaming pitcher is
spooned on top to "cap" the cappuccino and retain heat. The proportion of
espresso to steamed and frothed milk for cappuccino is usually 1/3 espresso, 1/3
steamed milk and 1/3 frothed milk on top.
Cupping: While tasting wine is called "tasting", tasting
coffee is called "cupping".
Demitasse: A small (1/2 size) cup used for serving espresso.
It is a French term meaning 'half cup'.
Flavor: This is the all-encompassing coffee term and
includes the impressions of acidity, aroma, and body. It is also used to convey
any specific taste that is present in the coffee, such as "nutty", "spicy", or
"musty".
French Press: A device for making coffee in which ground
coffee is steeped in water. The grounds are then removed from the coffee by
means of a filter plunger which presses the grounds to the bottom of the pot.
Also referred to as a plunger pot.
French Roast: Dark Roasted. Taste bittersweet but not like
burnt charcoal.
Hard Bean: Coffee grown at relatively high altitudes, 4,000
to 4,500 feet. Coffee grown above 4,500 feet is referred to as strictly hard
bean. This terminology says that beans grown at higher altitudes mature more
slowly and are harder and denser than other beans and are thus more
desirable.
Latte: A shot or two of espresso that has been poured into a
cup filled with steamed milk and topped off with foamed milk (about a 1/4").
Mocha: A small irregular bean. Has a unique acid character.
Generally shipped from Mocha Yemen. It is sometimes mixed with coffee shipped
from Mocha Yemen.
Monsooned Coffee: Coffee deliberately exposed to monsoon
winds in open warehouse to increase body and reduce acidity.
Peaberry: Normally, each coffee cherry contains two beans.
Occasionally, a cherry will form with only one bean. These are called peaberries
and are frequently separated and sold as its own distinct varietal. New Guinea
is one of the more popular ones.
Stale: Coffee that has been exposed to oxygen for too long.
It becomes flat and has a cardboard taste.
Sweet: Smooth and palatable coffee that is free from defects
and harsh flavors.
Tone: The appearance or color of coffee. i.e. "This light
toned coffee resembles the brown robes of the Franciscan Order."
Varietal: The term used for the coffee that comes from a
geographical region. A Sumatra, Kenya, Costa Rica or a Java are varietals. As in
wine...soil, climate and cultivation methods affect the taste of your coffee.
The term varietal is actually a misnomer, since Arabica coffee plants are
basically of the same species, unlike wine grapes which come from different
species of grape vines.