1 Quality Bean, 1 Perfect Cup
Coffee is grown on small, evergreen trees in plantations across South and Central America, Africa and Asia. As they require exactly the right amount of shaded sunlight, regular watering, fertilizing, and pest and weed control, young coffee trees demand constant care from farmers.
On the plantation
It can take up to four years for a coffee tree to reach mature production, and this can be maintained for 40 years if the tree is well managed.
Arabica and Robusta
Among approximately 60 existing species of coffee, Arabica and Robusta are the two grown for commercial and manufacturing purposes.
Robusta, which is from a botanical classification point of view a variety of Canephora, is grown at low altitude, from sea level to about 800 m (this is also influenced by latitude). Robusta is characterized by strong note, strong body and very little acidity. It is mainly grown in Vietnam, Brazil and Indonesia.
Arabica grows at higher altitude, usually above 800 m, and up to 2500 m. It includes several well known varieties such as Bourbon, Tipica, Caturra, Catuai, Catimor, Mundo Novo, Colombia, etc. Arabica is characterized by fine aroma, less body, and pleasant acidity. Brazil, Colombia, Ethiopia, Central America, Mexico, India, Eastern Africa are among the best-known Arabica producing countries.
In NESCAFÉ® Dolce Gusto® you will find 100% pure Arabica beans, offering you the best in terms of flavor and aroma!
Picking the beans
Once coffee trees begin to produce fruit, it takes about nine months for the fruit to ripen into red coffee 'cherries'. For best quality, only the ripe, red cherries are selectively picked, leaving unripe cherries on the branches to ripen. Each tree must be visited several times during the harvest; this is a more expensive and time consuming method. Alternatively, the farmer may judge the time to harvest, and then strip the trees of both ripe and unripe cherries in one go. This is more efficient, but results in lower overall quality.
Preparing the beans
The coffee beans must be dried and prepared for roasting. There are two ways of preparing coffee beans - the 'dry' method and the 'wet' method.
With the dry method, freshly picked red coffee 'cherries' are spread across special mats and left in the sun to dry for two to three weeks.
With the 'wet' method, a 'pulping' machine is used to remove the outer pulp away from the 'cherries'. The resulting "parchment coffee" is fermented and soaked to remove any remaining pulp. Then the parchment coffee is hulled to obtain the beans.
Bean selection
At this stage, coffee beans have a greenish tinge and are therefore known as 'green beans', which have almost no coffee smell or taste. Before being packed into bags and shipped across the world, green beans are sorted, graded and checked to ensure a high quality end product. Stinkers, blacks, sours and foxes are just a few of the names for imperfect beans that are rejected.
Blending
Tasting and blending procedures are complex, and each coffee manufacturer follows the blends for its coffees very closely.
It's up to a skilled team of blending experts to ensure that the quality and flavor of the coffee they produce is consistent, year in year out.
Roasting the beans
It is not until the green beans are roasted that they release the coffee aroma and flavor as we know it.
Depending on the roasting equipment and the desired flavor of the coffee being made, green beans are roasted at between 180°C and 240°C for between three and 12 minutes.
Grinding
Before it can be brewed, roasted coffee must be ground. Grinding increases the surface area of the coffee, allowing the flavor to be extracted more easily when brewing.
Making a NESCAFÉ® Dolce Gusto® Capsule
The coffee in the Capsule made exactly the same way with roasted and 100% pure Arabica ground coffee: beans are blended, roasted, and ground. Finally, this fresh coffee brew is oxygen purged, to "lock in the freshness of the coffee. The NESCAFÉ® Dolce Gusto® smart capsules use the vacuum seal to lock in the freshness of coffee. Filters are used in conjunction with our 15 bar pressure to create a "true coffee house" quality beverage, cup after cup.