Decaf Roasted Coffee Beans

£4.30£4.99

Select £4.99£65.00

Out of stock

Select £4.30£15.40

50 in stock

Category:
Share

Description

Drinking up to four cups of caffeinated coffee a day is perfectly healthy, but decaffeinated coffee has many benefits. It lets coffee drinkers have a late cuppa without staring at the ceiling into the wee small hours. It is also a good bet for pregnant or breastfeeding women and people with medical conditions like insomnia or high blood pressure. The process used to decaffeinate coffee also lowers beans acidity meaning that people who find the regular stuff upsets their stomach often fare much better on decaf.

But decaffeinated coffee has an image problem. The very word ‘decaf’ is associated with flat, tasteless cups of mirky brew. Decaf’s inferiority is largely a myth that has its roots in history. Thanks to technological breakthroughs modern caffeine-free coffees can more than satisfy the sophisticated pallets of the even the most discerning drinkers.

Great beans here, all sourced from hillsides in Colombia’s coffee-belt. The beans have been decaffeinated naturally using the C02 process. The coffee is very versatile and is medium roasted with a nice mellow flavour.

Perhaps less impressive for those who like an espresso – but great for people who like the longer-style filter coffees and pour overs

How is decaf coffee made?

How is decaf coffee made?

Caffeine-free coffee has come a long way since its early days. The process of removing the magic molecule from beans was invented by German merchant Ludwig Roselius who commercialized the product under the still successful ‘cafe HAG’ brand. Early attempts at removing caffeine relied on treating the beans with solvents such as benzene. This damaged the beans and affected the quality of the coffee, making it harder to roast accurately.

Chemical solvents including ethyl acetate or methylene chloride are still used today, but a new breed of demanding coffee customer has helped drive the push towards chemical-free methods of production. Today’s more natural methods are gentler and do a much better job of preserving the flavour of coffee beans. The two most popular ‘natural’ ways of doing it are called the ‘Swiss Water Process’ and the ‘C02 Process’ (both are explained below). When choosing a decaf, look for these as chemical methods affect compounds key for the flavours and aromas of the magic bean to a much greater degree.

The Swiss Water Process

This involves soaking raw beans in caffeine-free green coffee extract as a solvent. As the beans steep, their caffeine is drawn out into the liquid. The coffee is drained out and the beans are dried and bagged.

While a natural and gentle process, the same solvent is often used to treat a vast number of batches of beans, which some say flattens out the unique flavour and aromas of any individual bean.

The C02 or ‘sparkling water’ process

This involves soaking raw beans in water and in a sealed tank and pumping C02 into the beans at very high pressures. This draws out the caffeine but leaves larger molecules responsible for taste behind.

Neither method is perfect. Chemical and flavour profiles of beans are almost always affected in some way by the treatment process. However, the industry is light years ahead of where it was 30 years ago and it is possible to get some very delicious decaf coffees that are worth every penny.

Cup Profile

Aroma : Floral
Acidity : medium
Body : Smooth silky
Flavour : tangerine and hazelnut
Altitude : Grown 1300 – 1800 metres

Additional information

Weight .1 g

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “Decaf Roasted Coffee Beans”

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.