Brew temperature, at fixed brew strength and extraction, has little impact on the sensory profile of drip brew coffee

Abstract The brew temperature is widely considered a key parameter affecting the final quality of coffee, with a temperature near 93 °C often described as optimal. In particular, drip brewers that do not achieve a minimum brew temperature of 92 °C within a prescribed time period fail their certifica...

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Main Authors: Mackenzie E. Batali, William D. Ristenpart, Jean-Xavier Guinard
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2020-10-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-73341-4
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spelling doaj-baed37a93b9a44a28f5b4e65c6d723cd2021-10-10T11:22:50ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222020-10-0110111410.1038/s41598-020-73341-4Brew temperature, at fixed brew strength and extraction, has little impact on the sensory profile of drip brew coffeeMackenzie E. Batali0William D. Ristenpart1Jean-Xavier Guinard2Department of Food Science and Technology, University of California, DavisDepartment of Chemical Engineering, University of California, DavisDepartment of Food Science and Technology, University of California, DavisAbstract The brew temperature is widely considered a key parameter affecting the final quality of coffee, with a temperature near 93 °C often described as optimal. In particular, drip brewers that do not achieve a minimum brew temperature of 92 °C within a prescribed time period fail their certification. There is little empirical evidence in terms of rigorous sensory descriptive analysis or consumer preference testing, however, to support any particular range of brew temperatures. In this study, we drip-brewed coffee to specific brew strengths, as measured by total dissolved solids (TDS), and extraction yields, as measured by percent extraction (PE), spanning the range of the classic Coffee Brewing Control Chart. Three separate brew temperatures of 87 °C, 90 °C, or 93 °C were tested, adjusting the grind size and overall brew time as necessary to achieve the target TDS and PE. Although the TDS and PE both significantly affected the sensory profile of the coffee, surprisingly the brew temperature had no appreciable impact. We conclude that brew temperature should be considered as only one of several parameters that affect the extraction dynamics, and that ultimately the sensory profile is governed by differences in TDS and PE rather than the brew temperature, at least over the range of temperatures tested.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-73341-4
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mackenzie E. Batali
William D. Ristenpart
Jean-Xavier Guinard
spellingShingle Mackenzie E. Batali
William D. Ristenpart
Jean-Xavier Guinard
Brew temperature, at fixed brew strength and extraction, has little impact on the sensory profile of drip brew coffee
Scientific Reports
author_facet Mackenzie E. Batali
William D. Ristenpart
Jean-Xavier Guinard
author_sort Mackenzie E. Batali
title Brew temperature, at fixed brew strength and extraction, has little impact on the sensory profile of drip brew coffee
title_short Brew temperature, at fixed brew strength and extraction, has little impact on the sensory profile of drip brew coffee
title_full Brew temperature, at fixed brew strength and extraction, has little impact on the sensory profile of drip brew coffee
title_fullStr Brew temperature, at fixed brew strength and extraction, has little impact on the sensory profile of drip brew coffee
title_full_unstemmed Brew temperature, at fixed brew strength and extraction, has little impact on the sensory profile of drip brew coffee
title_sort brew temperature, at fixed brew strength and extraction, has little impact on the sensory profile of drip brew coffee
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Abstract The brew temperature is widely considered a key parameter affecting the final quality of coffee, with a temperature near 93 °C often described as optimal. In particular, drip brewers that do not achieve a minimum brew temperature of 92 °C within a prescribed time period fail their certification. There is little empirical evidence in terms of rigorous sensory descriptive analysis or consumer preference testing, however, to support any particular range of brew temperatures. In this study, we drip-brewed coffee to specific brew strengths, as measured by total dissolved solids (TDS), and extraction yields, as measured by percent extraction (PE), spanning the range of the classic Coffee Brewing Control Chart. Three separate brew temperatures of 87 °C, 90 °C, or 93 °C were tested, adjusting the grind size and overall brew time as necessary to achieve the target TDS and PE. Although the TDS and PE both significantly affected the sensory profile of the coffee, surprisingly the brew temperature had no appreciable impact. We conclude that brew temperature should be considered as only one of several parameters that affect the extraction dynamics, and that ultimately the sensory profile is governed by differences in TDS and PE rather than the brew temperature, at least over the range of temperatures tested.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-73341-4
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