Coffee review

SCAA Coffee Flavor Wheel learns the sour, sweet, bitter and salty of coffee

Published: 2025-08-21 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2025/08/21, What is the best overall taste, and what is the appropriate ratio of sour to bitter taste? these all need to be adjusted according to individual tastes. If they are cooked for others, beans should be selected according to the preferences of coffee drinkers. Change the hot water temperature, extraction time and grinding degree, to find the best value. The taste of coffee roasted from light to medium is low molecular weight and middle molecular weight.

What is the best overall taste, and what is the appropriate ratio of sour to bitter taste? these all need to be adjusted according to individual tastes. If they are cooked for others, beans should be selected according to the preferences of coffee drinkers. Change the hot water temperature, extraction time and grinding degree, to find the best value.

The taste of coffee from light to medium roasting is mainly low molecular weight and medium molecular weight sour and sweet taste, but too many defective beans or improper roasting, even shallow roasting will produce a thankless bitter and salty taste. As for deep baking, it is mainly bitter and salty with high molecular weight. Unless you are familiar with the deep baking methods of traditional drum roasters, it is not easy to break the fate of deep baked beans with salty taste. But deep baking is by no means useless. The rarest deep-baked flavor spectrum is "thick but not bitter, sweet and mellow to moisten the throat". After experiments, it is not a myth. Generally speaking, 70%-72% of roasted coffee beans are insoluble in water, and water-soluble flavor ingredients account for only 28%-30% of the weight of cooked beans. What are the contents of these soluble flavors? SCAA senior consultant Lin GE's masterpiece, "Coffee Cup tester Handbook," contains relevant data.

The percentage indicates the weight ratio of each flavor ingredient to the soluble substance of coffee.

According to the above data, the weight proportion of sour, sweet, bitter and salty soluble flavors of coffee cooked beans is obviously the most, accounting for 39% of the soluble substances, followed by bitter substances (264%), salty taste (4%), sour taste (lowest) and not more than 54%. The total is 848%, and the rest unlisted should be flavors with less content. However, Ringer did not specify the baking degree of the sampling, so let's take the cup to measure the usual moderate baking Agtron#55, depending on the baking degree, these values will be different, but as long as the baking degree is within the palatable range, the order of the proportion of the above flavors will not change.

Please do not think that the proportion of sweetness is the highest, and coffee is supposed to be as sweet as honey. in fact, this is not the case. the bitter sour or even salty taste of black coffee can easily interfere with sweetness, which involves the complex relationship between sour, bitter, salty and sweet. Only when the cell walls of raw beans are thick, and the contents of sucrose and amino acids are higher than the average, coupled with perfect baking, sweetness can break away from the other three flavors, "encirclement and suppression", and stand out. So sweetness is the most valuable happy taste of boutique coffee. Sour, sweet, bitter and salty tastes may appear in shallow baking, but in the deep-baked world, organic acids have been completely cracked, and the taste spectrum is simplified to sweet, bitter and salty tastes with higher molecular weight. Start with the shallow baking "taste spectrum", and then re-bake the "taste spectrum".

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