Abstract

Coffee quality is a complex trait involving sensory and bean characteristics as well as biochemical contents. The objective of this study was to assess the major factors influencing the quality of wild Arabica coffee (Coffea arabica L.) in the natural coffee forests of southwest and southeast Ethiopia. Results revealed that both natural (soil, aspect, elevation, climate, geographic location) and human factors (cherry harvesting/ handing, theft, forest management) considerably influenced the quality of wild Arabica coffee. The soil factor affected every component of coffee quality (cup quality, bean characteristics and biochemical contents). The cup quality of coffee varied with soil properties, especially with available P and soil texture. The bean size distribution was also affected by soil properties; there was significant positive relationship between soil pH, sand or Mn and the proportion of bold beans (retained on screen 17). Soil organic matter, total N and sand content were inversely correlated with caffeine content, but available P and clay content were positively correlated with caffeine. Increase in elevation led to increase in bean size up to the elevation of about 1600 m above sea level, but thereafter no more increase in bean size (hump-shaped relationship, not monotonic). Bean size increased with increase in longitude, but it decreased with increase in latitude. Cup quality was also significantly influenced by coffee harvesting and handling, but its influence was not noticed on bean size and biochemical contents. Coffee quality is therefore the resultant of an interaction of different natural and human factors prevailing in the respective area. Key words: Arabica coffee, bean size, biochemical content, cup quality, environment, management/handling.

Highlights

  • Food quality is an important feature because the food people choose depends largely on its quality (Vaclavik and Christian, 2008)

  • The present study clearly demonstrated that the quality of wild Arabica coffee was considerably influenced by the environmental conditions and anthropogenic factors prevailing in the natural coffee forest ecosystems from where the samples were collected

  • The study demonstrated that the quality of wild Arabica coffee was influenced by different factors -environmental factors, management factors, socio-economic factors, institutional factors and others

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Food quality is an important feature because the food people choose depends largely on its quality (Vaclavik and Christian, 2008). The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) defines quality as ‘the ability of a set of inherent characteristics of a product, system or process to fulfill requirement of customers and other interested parties’ (ISO, 2000). Method or group of methods designed to control the quality of a defined product may be applicable in a particular situation, but they are subject to a constant evolution (Costell, 2002). This means quality is a subjective term, and it can have different meanings depending upon the context in which the term is used

Objectives
Methods
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call