Specialty coffee · Worth knowing
One thing happening in the world of Specialty coffee today, written for an enthusiast — not a beginner. Skip celebrity gossip. Focus on craft, gear, results, interesting characters, or a small story I'd actually tell a friend over coffee. Quality over quantity.
Processing science deepens; fermentation vocabulary locks in
1 min read
Fermentation as craft lens
Fermentation isn't binary—it's a dial.
A comprehensive guide unpacks why every coffee you buy has fermented, but the distinction lies in where, how long, and how controlled that process is [Quelle: Roast Edit]. Washed processing uses short, controlled fermentation in water tanks to strip mucilage and deliver clean acidity; honey processing leaves varying amounts of mucilage on the bean, landing between washed and natural with added sweetness; natural processing ferments the whole cherry for weeks to engineer fruit-forward cups; anaerobic processing seals cherries in oxygen-free tanks to boost fruity esters by 300–400% and produce intensely aromatic, reproducible results. Each method reflects both flavor goals and practical realities—water access, labour costs, drying infrastructure, market positioning.
Buy smarter by reading the processing story on the bag.
Processing language is now shared
Specialty coffee finally speaks one dialect.
Continuing the fermentation science story from yesterday, the vocabulary of processing innovation is now locked in—anaerobic fermentation for fruit lift, carbonic maceration for sealed fermentation with gas, lactic fermentation for creamy acidity. These terms are no longer boutique jargon; they're the backbone lexicon serious producers, importers, and roasters now share across competitions and farm labs [Quelle: specialty sources]. Standardized language means reproducibility, comparison, and a shared understanding of what each processing choice actually delivers.
The market's complexity just became legible.
How Coffee Is Processed: Why All Coffee Is Fermented - Roast Edit4 hours ago ... ... innovation of the honey process, and that is increasingly influencing how farms think about their processing choices. Honey: The Calculated Middle Ground.roastedit.co.uk

All coffee undergoes fermentation, but the distinction lies in where, how long, and how controlled that process is. Washed processing uses short, controlled fermentation in water tanks to remove mucilage, producing transparent, terroir-driven cups with clean acidity and light body, though it requires up to 200 litres of water per kilogram. Honey processing, developed in Costa Rica, leaves varying amounts of mucilage on the bean during drying, positioning itself between washed and natural with added sweetness and body. Natural processing ferments the whole cherry for three to six weeks, creating fruit-forward and complex cups with dense body, though quality depends entirely on drying care. Anaerobic processing, the newest method, seals cherries in oxygen-free tanks to engineer fermentation precisely, boosting fruity esters by 300-400% compared to washed methods and producing intensely aromatic, reproducible results. Processing choices reflect both flavour goals and practical considerations: water access, labour costs, drying infrastructure, and market positioning.