Physiological and sensorial quality of Arabica coffee subjected to different temperatures and drying airflows

  • Alves G
  • Borém F
  • Isquierdo E
  • et al.
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Abstract

The objective of this study was to evaluate the correlation between a group of physiological variables (electrical conductivity, potassium leaching, and germination percentage) and a group of drying kinetics variables (drying time and drying rate) in addition to verifying the relation between drying kinetics variables and coffee quality as a function of processing type, temperature, and drying airflow. Coffee drying was conducted in a fixed-layer dryer at two temperatures and two airflows. After drying, an evaluation of the physiological and sensorial quality was conducted. Based on the results obtained, the following conclusions were drawn: coffee that is processed via a dry method is more sensitive to mechanical drying with heated air than coffee processed via a wet method, resulting in poor physiological performance; airflow does not interfere with the physiological quality of pulped and natural coffees; a temperature increase from 40 to 45°C resulted in a decrease in the physiological quality only for pulped coffee; and an increase in the drying rate as a result of an increase in the drying temperature to 40°C had a negative effect on the sensorial quality of pulped coffee.

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APA

Alves, G. E., Borém, F. M., Isquierdo, E. P., Siqueira, V. C., Cirillo, M. Â., & Pinto, A. C. F. (2017). Physiological and sensorial quality of Arabica coffee subjected to different temperatures and drying airflows. Acta Scientiarum. Agronomy, 39(2), 225. https://doi.org/10.4025/actasciagron.v39i2.31065

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