Quick Answer: Raw (green) coffee beans are unroasted seeds packed with complex organic compounds — primarily chlorogenic acids, trigonelline, and sucrose — that transform under heat into the aromatic, acidic, and sweet notes defining your brew. Mastery begins with understanding origin variables, water chemistry, grind precision, and roast kinetics. Liberty Beans selects only specialty-grade greens with traceable terroir, ensuring optimal chemical potential before the first crack.

The Anatomy of a Raw Coffee Bean: Chemistry Before the Roast

Raw coffee beans — often called “greens” — are dense, pale-hued seeds encased in parchment and mucilage after processing. Chemically, they’re reservoirs of untapped potential. The dominant compounds include:

“Green beans aren’t inert. They’re living archives of terroir, enzymatic activity, and metabolic residue. Ignoring their biochemical state is like baking bread without understanding yeast.” — Dr. Elena Vasquez, Coffee Biochemist, SCA Research Fellow

Terroir & Varietal: How Soil, Altitude, and Genetics Shape Flavor Potential

Raw bean quality begins long before export — it’s encoded in elevation, rainfall patterns, soil mineral composition, and cultivar genetics. For example:

Varietal Typical Altitude Dominant Acids Flavor Archetype
SL28 (Kenya) 1,700–2,100 MASL Malic, Citric Blackcurrant, Tomato Vine, Winey
Caturra (Colombia) 1,400–1,800 MASL Phosphoric, Tartaric Caramel, Red Apple, Nutty
Pacamara (El Salvador) 1,200–1,600 MASL Quinic, Chlorogenic Juicy Stone Fruit, Cocoa Nibs

Water Mineral Profiles: The Hidden Catalyst in Extraction Science

Raw beans’ solubles — caffeine, acids, melanoidins — require specific ion carriers for optimal dissolution. Magnesium pulls fruity esters; calcium stabilizes body; bicarbonate buffers pH to prevent over-extraction sourness.

“Using distilled water on high-grown Ethiopian naturals? You’re muting 40% of its floral top-notes. Water isn’t neutral — it’s an active reagent.” — Hiro Tanaka, Water Chemistry Consultant, Tokyo Brewers Guild

Mineral Ideal PPM Impact on Extraction
Magnesium (Mg²⁺) 10–30 ppm Enhances brightness, fruit acidity, volatile aromatics
Calcium (Ca²⁺) 30–60 ppm Builds body, stabilizes colloidal suspension
Bicarbonate (HCO₃⁻) 40–80 ppm Buffers acidity, prevents metallic/sour off-notes

Grind Size Specifications & The Extraction Yield Curve

Grind particle distribution dictates surface area exposure — directly controlling TDS (Total Dissolved Solids) and extraction yield %. Under-extraction (<18%) tastes sour; over-extraction (>22%) becomes bitter and hollow.

  1. Coarse (French Press): 800–1000 microns — low pressure, long contact time
  2. Medium (Pour Over): 400–600 microns — balanced flow rate, ideal for highlighting origin character
  3. Fine (Espresso): 200–300 microns — high pressure, rapid saturation, demands precise dose/tamp

Use a quality burr grinder with calibrated alignment. Worn or misaligned burrs create “fines” — micro-particles that clog filters and spike bitterness via channeling.

Roast Profiling Thermodynamics: Where Chemistry Becomes Art

Raw beans undergo non-enzymatic browning reactions (Maillard, Strecker, Caramelization) between 165°C–220°C. Each phase must be controlled:

Liberty Beans uses sample roasting + gas chromatography to map volatile compound peaks — targeting specific ester and aldehyde signatures per varietal.

Brewing Ratio Interactive Panel: Dialing In Your Perfect Cup

Step 1: Choose Your Brew Method

  • Pour Over: 1:16 ratio (e.g., 20g coffee → 320g water)
  • AeroPress: 1:12 ratio for concentrated brew
  • French Press: 1:15 ratio, steep 4 mins

Step 2: Adjust for Extraction Yield

  1. Brew → measure TDS with refractometer
  2. Calculate Extraction % = (TDS × Brew Weight) ÷ Dose Weight
  3. Target 19–21% for filter; 18–20% for immersion

Step 3: Fine-Tune with Grind & Temp

  • Too sour? → Finer grind or hotter water (up to 96°C)
  • Too bitter? → Coarser grind or cooler water (down to 88°C)

Storage, Handling & Freshness Degradation Metrics

Raw beans degrade via lipid oxidation and moisture migration. Store in GrainPro bags at 12–16°C, 55–65% RH. Avoid temperature swings — condensation triggers enzymatic staling.

Liberty Beans sources via direct-trade contracts with harvest-date transparency. Every bag includes crop year and moisture content (target: 10–12%).

Jim Morton — Culinary Chef & Coffee Expert

With 15+ years in Michelin kitchens and specialty coffee sourcing, Jim blends culinary precision with obsessive bean chemistry. He personally profiles every Liberty Beans roast using thermodynamic modeling and GC-MS flavor mapping. His mantra: “Raw beans are ingredients — not commodities. Treat them like truffles: with reverence, measurement, and craft.”

[FAQS]
Q: What chemical changes occur in raw coffee beans during roasting?
A: Chlorogenic acids break down into quinic and caffeic acids (influencing bitterness and mouthfeel), sucrose caramelizes into melanoidins (body/sweetness), and trigonelline degrades into pyridines (roasty aromas). Lipids migrate outward, enabling crema in espresso.

Q: Why does water mineral content matter for brewing raw beans post-roast?
A: Magnesium ions selectively extract fruity esters; calcium builds colloidal body; bicarbonate buffers pH to avoid sourness. Distilled or hard tap water distorts flavor balance — aim for 150ppm total hardness with Mg²⁺ dominance.

Q: How do I adjust grind size to fix under-extracted coffee?
A: Under-extraction (<18% yield) tastes sour — correct by grinding finer to increase surface area, extending contact time, or raising brew temp to 94–96°C. Always recalibrate after changing beans or equipment. Q: Can I freeze raw green coffee beans to extend shelf life? A: Only if vacuum-sealed. Freezing unprotected beans causes ice crystal formation, rupturing cellular structure and accelerating lipid oxidation upon thaw. Ideal storage: cool (12–16°C), stable humidity (55–65% RH), in multi-layer GrainPro bags. [/FAQS]