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Thursday 2 August 2012

Myths about Coffee


Myth 1: Darker Roasters Have Bolder Flavor
There is a rather pervasive myth about coffee that I hear on almost daily basis, namely that the darker the roast the stronger the brew. The truth is that there are two different and sometimes competing flavors in coffee, one inherent to the bean and the other a product of the roasting process. From a roaster’s perspective, I want to taste the coffee, not the roast. Much of what makes coffee interesting to me is in fact the complexity of the coffee, some or much of which gets lost the darker you roast, delicate flavor oils are broken down by excessive heat. Some of the boldest coffees I have ever had were light roasted.
I strongly suspect that the myth of the dark roast is driven more by market realities than consumer taste. While light roasts have a lot of flavor within the first couple of weeks of roasting, the flavor oils begin to rapidly oxidize after two weeks. By comparison, the burnt outside of dark roasted beans have a much more enduring, if less interesting, flavor that outlasts light roast coffees by months. Since most roasters can’t get their coffee beans on the shelves, much less put them in consumers hands, within a week or two of roasting, it doesn’t make much sense to sell light roasted coffees that are only really good for a couple of weeks. So, instead they sell dark roasted or artificially flavored coffees, both of which don’t reflect the beans natural depth and complexity.
Colin and Harry

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