BrewFYI

Processing Methods

How coffee cherries are processed after harvest profoundly shapes the final cup — from clean washed coffees to fruit-forward naturals.

Washed (Wet Process)

Complexity: MEDIUM

Water usage: High (15-20 liters per kg of green coffee)

The most widely used method for specialty coffee. After picking, the cherry skin and pulp are mechanically removed, and the …

Natural (Dry Process)

Complexity: LOW

Water usage: Very low (minimal washing only)

The oldest and simplest processing method, where whole coffee cherries are dried intact on raised beds, patios, or tarps for …

Honey Process

Complexity: HIGH

Water usage: Low to moderate (pulping only)

A hybrid method originating in Costa Rica where the cherry skin is removed but varying amounts of mucilage (the sticky …

Pulped Natural (Semi-washed)

Complexity: LOW

Water usage: Low (pulping only, no fermentation tanks)

Developed in Brazil in the 1990s to balance cup quality with efficiency, the pulped natural method removes the cherry skin …

Wet-Hulled (Giling Basah)

Complexity: MEDIUM

Water usage: Low (brief overnight fermentation only)

A processing method unique to Indonesia (especially Sumatra, Sulawesi, and Flores) where parchment coffee is hulled at 30-50% moisture content …

Anaerobic Fermentation

Complexity: HIGH

Water usage: Low to moderate

An advanced experimental method where depulped (or whole) cherries are sealed in airtight tanks or barrels, creating an oxygen-free environment …

Carbonic Maceration

Complexity: HIGH

Water usage: Low

Borrowed from Beaujolais winemaking, this method places whole, intact coffee cherries in sealed tanks flushed with CO₂. Intracellular fermentation occurs …

Lactic Fermentation

Complexity: HIGH

Water usage: Low

A controlled fermentation method that selectively promotes Lactobacillus bacteria by managing temperature, pH, and oxygen levels. Depulped coffee with mucilage …

Washed Fermentation (Extended)

Complexity: MEDIUM

Water usage: High (submerged fermentation)

A variation of washed processing where fermentation time is deliberately extended to 48-120+ hours (vs. the standard 12-36 hours). The …

Swiss Water Decaf

Complexity: HIGH

Water usage: Moderate (recirculated in a closed system)

A chemical-free decaffeination process using only water, temperature, and time to remove 99.9% of caffeine from green (unroasted) coffee beans. …

Thermal Shock (Kenya Style)

Complexity: HIGH

Water usage: Very high (multiple soaking cycles)

A distinctive Kenyan washing station technique where fermented beans are soaked in clean cold water, then flushed with warm water, …

Monsooned

Complexity: MEDIUM

Water usage: None (ambient monsoon moisture only)

A unique Indian processing method where dried green coffee beans are exposed to monsoon winds and moisture in open warehouses …

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