Flavor Wheel Explorer
Interactive 3-tier flavor taxonomy explorer. Navigate from broad categories (Fruity, Floral, Sweet) through subcategories (Berry, Citrus, Stone Fruit) to specific descriptors (Blueberry, Lemon, Peach). Understand what you taste in your cup.
CalculatorYour Flavor Notes ()
How to Use
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1
Start from the center category
Begin with the innermost ring of the SCA/WCR Coffee Taster's Flavor Wheel, identifying the broadest flavor category present in your cup — fruity, floral, sweet, nutty, roasted, or spicy. This broad identification narrows your exploration before moving outward.
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Move outward to specific descriptors
From your center category, navigate toward the outer rings to find increasingly specific descriptors. A fruity note might resolve to citrus, then lemon, then zest — or to berry, then black fruit, then blackcurrant. Work methodically rather than jumping directly to specific terms.
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3
Match descriptors to your sensory experience
Select two or three descriptors that best match what you perceive in aroma, taste, and finish. Coffee's flavor is most accurately captured with 2-4 specific terms rather than broad generalities — this precision helps communicate about coffees and identify processing or origin characteristics.
About
The Flavor Wheel Explorer is built on the SCA and World Coffee Research Coffee Taster's Flavor Wheel — the most scientifically rigorous sensory lexicon available for coffee evaluation. Developed from trained sensory panel research across hundreds of coffee samples, the wheel organizes flavor perception from broad categories to specific descriptors, giving coffee drinkers a shared vocabulary for communicating about what they taste. This tool makes the wheel interactive, connecting descriptors to the origin characteristics, processing methods, and roast profiles that produce them.
Coffee contains over 1,000 identified volatile aromatic compounds — more than wine. The specific compounds present in any cup reflect a chain of decisions from seed selection and soil chemistry through harvest timing, processing method, roasting, and brewing. Understanding flavor at the descriptor level connects you to this chain. Noting 'washed Ethiopian jasmine and bergamot' rather than 'tastes good' tells you something specific about the growing altitude, processing method, and likely variety that produced that cup.
Using the flavor wheel systematically also develops your ability to detect defects — the off-flavors produced by processing errors, storage problems, or brewing mistakes. Fermented or vinegar notes indicate over-fermentation during processing. Medicinal phenolic notes suggest chlorinated water or contaminated equipment. Papery or cardboard notes point to oxidation from stale beans or improper storage. The same vocabulary that describes desirable complexity also diagnoses what went wrong, making it a complete tool for quality evaluation.