1 / 22

LESSONS LEARNED In Pursuit of “Fine” Robusta Coffees

LESSONS LEARNED In Pursuit of “Fine” Robusta Coffees. 10 th Annual AFCA Conference Uganda – February 14, 2013 Ted R Lingle CQI Senior Advisor. Mission: “Work internationally to improve the quality of coffee and the lives of the people who produce it.”. Coffee Quality Institute.

ziarre
Télécharger la présentation

LESSONS LEARNED In Pursuit of “Fine” Robusta Coffees

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. LESSONS LEARNEDIn Pursuit of “Fine” Robusta Coffees 10th Annual AFCA Conference Uganda – February 14, 2013 Ted R Lingle CQI Senior Advisor

  2. Mission: “Work internationally to improve the quality of coffee and the lives of the people who produce it.” Coffee Quality Institute

  3. Coffee Quality Institute Adding Value to Robusta: 2009 – 2013: 16 Workshops Uganda-5; Brazil-3; Indonesia-2; Korea-2 USA-2; Gana-1; Tanzania-1 “R” Graders – 72 from 12 Countries

  4. Coffee Quality Institute Adding Value to Robusta: 100+ “Fine” Robusta Coffees Cupped: Uganda – 30% Brazil – 30% Indonesia – 20% India – 10% Mexico – 2% Guatemala – 2% Tanzania – 2% D.R. Congo – 2% Others – 2%

  5. Coffee Quality Institute Experienced Cuppers“searching for answers”

  6. Robusta Taste Attributes Essential difference: • Bitter/Sweet Aspect Ratio • Salt/Acid Aspect Ratio

  7. Cupping • Accurate differentiations based on cup quality can be made consistently: • 80+ points = “Fine” Robusta Coffee

  8. Aromatic Differences • Unique aromatic traits require: a different flavor vocabulary for Robusta coffees

  9. Triangulation • Robusta origins present recognizable flavor differences • Robusta coffees can be differentiated by taste

  10. Lessons Learned: Protocols: • Roasting – longer, darker, higher temp • Cupping – greater weight • Flavor Attributes • Salt/Acid Aspect Ratio • Bitter/Sweet Aspect Ratio

  11. Lessons Learned: General Observations: • More difficult but more interesting to cup • Triangulations easier • Naturals as good or better than washed • Selective picking key factor in quality

  12. Lessons Learned: Coffees of Note: • Natural Ugandas • Washed Brazils • Indonesia • “Java Baron”

  13. Lessons Learned: Coffees of Note: • India • “Kappi Royale” • D.R. Congo • Guatemala • “Fruity”

  14. Taste Differences • Taste differences require adjustments in the taste recognition testing: - Acetic Acid vs. Citric Acid - Potassium vs. Sodium Chloride

  15. Higher yields • Lower production costs • More disease resistant • Natural (dry) processing • Higher ambient temperatures Competitive Advantages

  16. Leave cherries on tree for longer time • Selective picking is “Key” to quality • Induce “dry fermentation” • ALWAYS remove defects Basic Farmer Training

  17. “Differentiation is the free market mechanism for creating price premiums” • “High standards are the key component of all product differentiations” • “Product differentiations allow consumers to make enlightened purchase decisions” Differentiating Robusta Coffees

  18. By Cup - “Fine Robusta” = 80+ points • By Grade – “Fine Robusta” = 5 or fewer defects High Robusta Standards

  19. Place in “specialty” coffee market • Improvement in “commercial” blends • Essential for a “200+M” bag market Global Perspective

  20. East Africa – QUANTITY • Indonesia – VARIETY • West Africa - GROWTH Areas of Greatest Potential

  21. Differentiating Robusta coffees is the essential next step in building a brighter future for ALL coffee farmers worldwide. Conclusion

  22. Coffee Quality Institute Thank You: • Susan Corning – LEAD program • Henry Ngabirano – UCDA • Steve Walls – COMPETE • USAID – Africa staff members Uganda Coffee Development Authority

More Related