Cocoa, Tea, Coffee Flashcards

1
Q

The 2 common species of coffee bean:

A
Coffea arabica (South and central America, Africa)
Coffea robusta (Africa, Asia)
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2
Q

What are the 3 methods of coffee processing? Describe them

A
  1. Dry process: directly dry entire coffee bean -> NATURAL COFFEE
  2. Wet process: remove fruit pulp through fermentation -> wash off -> dry -> WASHED COFFEE
  3. Honey process: fruit mostly removed, some mucilage remain -> dry -> HONEY COFFEE
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3
Q

What is the purpose of the ferment step in washed coffee?

A
  1. degrade fruit pulp/mucilage (make water soluble) for easy removal
  2. develop flavor/aroma
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4
Q

What are common microbes found during coffee bean fermentation?

A

Escherichia, Enterobacter

Bacillus, Fusarium, Penicillium, Aspergillus

Erwinia dissolvens (from KONA COFFEE)

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5
Q

How long does the coffee bean wet ferment usually last?

A

24-90 hrs

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6
Q

Does fermentation occur with naturally dried coffee?

A

Yes; pulp and mucilage still present, fermented by yeast, bacteria, molds

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7
Q

True/False: starter cultures are used in coffee bean fermentation

A

False; not commercially used, little research

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8
Q

Which bean variety takes longer for the demucilagination process? Why? What other factors have an effect?

A

robusta
thicker layer
temperature, altitude

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9
Q

___ is an important step in preparing the final coffee bean. What are the common industrial conditions?

A

roasting

90s-6min at 200-250C (rotary drum)

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10
Q

True/False: all cocoa beans are fermented. Why or why not?

A

True.

need to remove pulp, develop flavor/color/aroma

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11
Q

What is fermented in the cocoa bean pod?

A

pulp surrounding cocoa bean (rich in carbs)

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12
Q

What organism grows first in the cocoa bean ferment? Why?

A

yeast

favorable conditions: anaerobic, high in sugar, pH 3-4

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13
Q

What occurs in the cocoa pod composition during the yeast growth period?

A

ethanol and CO2 produced
sugars decrease
pectinolytic enzymes -> degrade pectin

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14
Q

What creates favorable conditions for LAB to grow in cocoa?

A

yeast will create degrade pectin -> permeable to allow air in -> AEROBIC CONDITIONS

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15
Q

What organism is present at the end of the cocoa bean ferment? What allows it to grow?

A

AAB
more breakdown of pulp -> more air
ethanol made by yeast, organic acids made by LAB

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16
Q

what is the cause of the end of cocoa fermentation?

A

AAB make acetic acid -> diffuse into bean -> BEAN DEATH

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17
Q

At the beginning of the cocoa ferment, glucose is used by ____. Fructose is used by: ______. Citric acid can be used by: ___.

A

yeast (best competitor); some used by LAB

LAB

Some LAB (citrate positive): use as co-substrate

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18
Q

What organism is NOT present in the beginning of the ferment? why?

A
AAB
anaerobic conditions (stored in heaps/boxes)
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19
Q

How is a cocoa bean fermentation usually set up?

A

box fermentation most common
stacked boxes containing beans
every 24 hrs, move to lower box -> collect at end

20
Q

Why is bean death important in cocoa fermentation?

A
prevent germination (which uses up nutrients in bean)
flavor development (enzymes/substrates in bean react after death -> flavor precursors)
21
Q

What is the main sugar in UNFERMENTED cocoa beans? How does this change during fermenting?

A

sucrose

invertase converts to glucose, fructose

22
Q

Why is the conversion of sugars during cocoa fermentation significant?

A

sucrose NOT reducing sugar (no browning)

glucose and fructose are reducing, can contribute to browning/flavor during roasting

23
Q

What gives fresh beans their purple hue, and what happens to those compounds during the ferment?

A

anthocyanins
broken down by GLYCOSIDASES -> bleaching, more reducing sugars
(lose purple color, gain browning/flavor)

24
Q

Is a purple fermented cocoa bean acceptable?

A

No (sign of poor ferment)

25
Q

In the late aerobic phase of cocoa fermentation, significant ___ enzyme activity occurs. What is the major one?

A

oxidative

PPO

26
Q

When does PPO become activated in cocoa ferment? What does this cause?

A

final stages of ferment, when air can penetrate
oxidize polyphenols in bean (enzymatic browning)
reduce astringency

27
Q

The main polyphenol classes in cocoa:

Which is responsible for browning?

A

Leucocyanidins

Catechins (browning)

28
Q

True/False: polyphenols are undesirable in cocoa

A

False: antioxidant properties, may want to leave some in chocolate

29
Q

What does the drying of cocoa beans accomplish?

A

reduce moisture from 50% to 8%

prevent mold, longer storage life

30
Q

How does storage affect cocoa beans?

A

can be good: slow oxidation/acid loss -> enhance quality

too long -> staling

31
Q

What is a SCOBY? What is it used for?

A

symbiotic culture of bacteria and yeast
combination of LAB, yeast, AAB in cellulose matrix
for making kombucha

32
Q

What organism type in the SCOBY is responsible for making the cellulose?

A

AAB

33
Q

True/False: the finished kombucha is non-alcoholic

A

true; ethanol concentrations low (converted to acetic acid)

34
Q

Why is S. cerevisiae usually used for kombucha? Why might alternative yeasts be used?

A

most efficient

other yeasts -> different flavor profiles, complexity

35
Q

The main microbe type present in the final kombucha is _____, including ___ and ___.

A

AAB

acetobacter, gluconobacter

36
Q

What species produces the cellulose? How do the other species in the SCOBY contribute?

A
komagateibacter xylinus (AAB)
yeast break down sucrose -> glucose + fructose (needed as materials)
37
Q

K. xylinus synthesizes _____, which is used to polymerize into ____.

A

UDP-glucose

B-1,4 glucan chains (cellulose)

38
Q

Where is the cellulose produced in K. xylinus?

A

extruded out of cell pores (complex terminals)

extracellular fibrils attached to membrane -> assemble to macrofibrils

39
Q

Why is there delay in forming the SCOBY?

A

bacteria can use dissolved oxygen; only form raft when need to stay afloat

40
Q

Can a SCOBY grow without limit?

A

NO, too thick -> insufficient nutrients/oxygen -> dormant

41
Q

True/False: all the fermentation organisms in kombucha are contained in the SCOBY

A

false; some are dispersed in liquid (dormant but can revive)

42
Q

Describe the basic process of making kombucha (backslopping).

A

use dormant sessile microbes -> incubate at room temp, aerobic -> form SCOBY
(or use preexisting SCOBY)
rinse and add to tea + sugar
ferment aerobically 7-14 days

43
Q

What is the period of greatest safety risk when making kombucha?

A

time between after boiling until pH drops below 4.2 (risk of pathogen or other bacteria contamination, outgrow SCOBY)

44
Q

True/False: molds are not a health concern in kombucha

A

false

45
Q

What are the chemical safety concerns with kombucha?

A

overferment -> too acidic -> possible leaching of chemical contaminants from container

interfere with medications (affect acidity of stomach)