(Press-News.org) In the selection of specialty coffees, those that score above 80 points in blind tests are free of physical and sensory defects. Greenish-colored beans are known to give the drink an astringent taste, which is described as harsh, pungent, and dry. These beans are therefore discarded, along with broken, black, burnt, pitted, or undersized beans.
However, in a study published in the journal Food and Bioprocess Technology, researchers from the Federal University of Uberlândia (UFU) in Patos de Minas (state of Minas Gerais, Brazil) conducted a series of fermentations with ripe and unripe fruits of the Arara cultivar of Arabica coffee (Coffea arabica). As a result, they obtained beverages comparable to and even superior to those prepared with beans from only ripe fruits, following all the protocols of the Specialty Coffee Association (SCA), an international organization that sets standards for specialty coffees.
In blind cup tests, which evaluate coffee based on its sensory attributes, professional tasters (known as Q-graders) gave beverages containing a percentage of unripe fruit beans scores above 80, which defines specialty coffee.
The researchers achieved these results using self-induced anaerobic fermentation (SIAF), in which the fruits are placed in bioreactors – 200-liter polystyrene barrels that are hermetically sealed – for up to 96 hours after harvesting. No oxygen enters the bioreactors, and carbon dioxide is released through a valve. The microorganisms naturally present in coffee fruits then carry out a series of biochemical processes that result in a distinctive coffee flavor. In some experiments, inoculants – specific microorganisms previously isolated for this purpose – were added to this type of fermentation.
“With this work, we saw that using SIAF at different fermentation times, with temperature and pH control and with or without the addition of inoculum, can not only minimize the deleterious effects of immature beans on the beverage but also make it superior, adding value to the product while still on the farm,” says Luiza Braga, first author of the study, conducted as part of her master’s degree in the Graduate Program in Food Engineering at the Faculty of Chemical Engineering (FEQ-UFU) in Patos de Minas.
The work is part of a project supported by FAPESP through an agreement with the Ministry of Science, Technology, and Innovation (MCTI), in a partnership between UFU and the Federal University of Lavras. Additional funding for the study was provided by the Minas Gerais State Research Support Foundation (FAPEMIG), the Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel (CAPES, an agency that belongs to the Ministry of Education), the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq), and the Brazilian Innovation Agency (FINEP). The latter two agencies are linked to the MCTI.
“Anaerobic fermentation, carried out immediately after harvesting and before drying, is not a traditional process. However, coffee growers and experts have been seeking knowledge about the process because of the gain in flavor and aroma it brings to the drink, which can then fetch higher prices than those usually found on the market,” says Líbia Diniz Santos, a professor at FEQ-UFU and coordinator of the study.
The authors of the study are members of the research group named Da Semente à Xícara (which translates as “from seed to cup”), created in 2019 to bring together researchers, students, postgraduates, and technicians from FEQ, the Institute of Genetics and Biochemistry, and the faculties of Electrical and Computer Engineering, all on the Patos de Minas campus of UFU. The group even has its own brand of specialty coffee, Porandu, which means “to research” or “to investigate” in Tupi.
Analysis
The Arara cultivar was launched in 2012 by the Procafé Foundation after 15 years of research in search of a disease-resistant coffee adapted to the diverse climatic conditions of Brazil’s Cerrado savanna biome. The drink is valued for its citrus notes and robust body, making it attractive to both the domestic and export markets.
The authors of the study used an artificial intelligence tool developed by the research group and noted that 70% of the fruits used in the experiments, which were harvested at Fazenda Chuá in Patos de Minas, were immature.
Despite using green beans in the beverages tasted by the panelists, the authors emphasize that the other SCA criteria were strictly followed. Thus, broken and small beans were discarded during preparation. Consequently, green beans represented 13% to 30% of the total beverage. “We believe that if there had been 70% green beans in the beverage, even if fermented, this would have been noticeable in the final product,” Santos points out.
A total of 32 treatments were tested, including different fermentation times ranging from 24 to 96 hours with and without temperature control. The combinations also included the presence or absence of inoculum, as well as submerged fermentation with 30% of the bioreactor filled with water or fermentation in a solid state without water.
The group developed an electronic device that monitors the pH and temperature and transmits the data from sensors inside the bioreactor to an external monitor. This eliminates the need to open the barrel and interfere with the experiment in order to collect information.
“When we controlled the external temperature at 27 °C, we observed that the scores were higher, even higher than those of preparations containing only ripe beans. With this, we can demonstrate that anaerobic fermentation, especially in a solid state, adds sensory attributes that elevate the coffee to the special category,” Braga explains.
The group now intends to understand which compound or compounds generated in the fermented green bean provide the sensory attributes that give the coffee its special qualities. Future work will also explore the effect of anaerobic fermentation on other coffee varieties.
About São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP)
The São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) is a public institution with the mission of supporting scientific research in all fields of knowledge by awarding scholarships, fellowships and grants to investigators linked with higher education and research institutions in the State of São Paulo, Brazil. FAPESP is aware that the very best research can only be done by working with the best researchers internationally. Therefore, it has established partnerships with funding agencies, higher education, private companies, and research organizations in other countries known for the quality of their research and has been encouraging scientists funded by its grants to further develop their international collaboration. You can learn more about FAPESP at www.fapesp.br/en and visit FAPESP news agency at www.agencia.fapesp.br/en to keep updated with the latest scientific breakthroughs FAPESP helps achieve through its many programs, awards and research centers. You may also subscribe to FAPESP news agency at http://agencia.fapesp.br/subscribe.
END
Fermentation method transforms unripe fruits into specialty coffees
Normally discarde, green beans from the Arara cultivar were subjected to airless fermentation and produced high-quality beverages in blind tests. Researchers see potential for the product to be valued in domestic and foreign markets
2025-08-13
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Oncology, primary care coordination necessary for best cancer patient outcomes
2025-08-13
Thanks to new advances in cancer care, more and more people are surviving cancer, with a projected total of 22.5 million survivors by 2032. The need for proper cancer survivorship care grows with each new case of remission, but according to new research from the University of Missouri School of Medicine, primary care could fill that need, given enough support.
Cancer survivorship care is complex, particularly after primary treatment has ended. Standard care addresses side effects from the treatment, encourages healthy lifestyle habits, discusses the patient's mental health, monitors cancer recurrence and screens for new cancers.
“Previous ...
Breakthrough discovery sparks new hope for breathing recovery after spinal cord injuries
2025-08-13
Today about 300,000 people nationally living with a spinal cord injury and with respiratory complications being the most common cause of illness and death, according to the Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation.
But the results of a new study, led by researchers at Case Western Reserve University’s School of Medicine, show promise that a group of nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord—called interneurons—can boost breathing when the body faces certain physiological challenges, such as exercise and environmental conditions associated with altitude.
The researchers believe their discovery could ...
Can officials say what they need to say about a health emergency in 280 characters?
2025-08-13
Public health officials had an unprecedented tool for near-instant, widespread communication during the COVID-19 pandemic and mpox epidemic: social media.
Now, one of the first studies of its kind, led by a health policy expert with the Texas A&M University School of Public Health, has found that X (Twitter at the time of the events) brought advantages — as well as disadvantages — in getting the word out.
“For the year that the COVID-19 pandemic and mpox outbreak overlapped, we wanted to understand how health authorities in Chicago used X: the nature of the posts, what information was shared, how it was presented to the public and how all of that ...
United for answers: leading ALS organizations announce ‘Champion Insights’ to unlock why athletes and military members face higher ALS risk
2025-08-13
NEW ORLEANS, August 13, 2025 — Answer ALS, in collaboration with ALS Therapy Development Institute (ALS TDI) and Augie’s Quest, today announced plans to launch Champion Insights, an ambitious research initiative designed to uncover critical genetic and metabolic mechanisms that may explain the significantly higher incidence of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) among endurance athletes, military service members, and potentially other high-performing populations.
ALS is a devastating neurodegenerative disease with no cure, affecting more than 5,000 Americans annually, and ...
Up to $5.2 million in federal funds will enable WashU to develop new biomanufacturing capabilities
2025-08-13
By Leah Shaffer
The process of biomanufacturing requires engineering microbes to produce useful chemicals and materials from carbon neutral processes. But current biomanufacturing cannot get beyond small production scale unless it can outcompete big oil.
The petrochemical industry produces chemicals and material building blocks at a low cost because these processes can run nonstop. However, performing microbial biomanufacturing continuously faces numerous challenges and presents a significant hurdle for economically viable bioproduction.
At the McKelvey School of Engineering at Washington University in St. Louis, researchers are ...
AI-informed approach to CAR design enhances bi-specific CAR T cells
2025-08-13
(MEMPHIS, Tenn. – August 13, 2025) A computational approach by St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital scientists promises to make designing T cell-based immunotherapies that target two cancer-related antigens at the same time far easier and faster. Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells are a type of immunotherapy that reprograms a patient’s immune cells to target a tumor-specific protein antigen. Targeting just one cell surface antigen often is not enough to eradicate the tumor. Thus, scientists ...
Discovery confirms early species of hominins co-existed in Ethiopia
2025-08-13
While we know much of the story of how humans evolved, the puzzle is still missing critical pieces. For example, fossil evidence for human evolution between 2 and 3 million years ago is patchy. It’s frustrating because we know that the branch of the hominin family tree that includes humans, or Homo sapiens, appears in the fossil record for the first time in this period.
Today, Homo sapiens (which anthropologists shorten to Homo), is the only hominin species alive. But in the past, Homo wasn’t alone. We coexisted and competed with other branches of the human family tree. Research ...
‘Controlled evolution’ dramatically boosts pDNA production for biomedical manufacturing
2025-08-13
Researchers have controlled the evolution of E. coli bacteria in the lab in order to dramatically increase the amount of plasmid DNA (pDNA) these modified bacteria produce. The advance is significant because pDNA is an essential – and expensive – ingredient in many gene therapies, and the new technique could drive down the cost of these medical treatments.
pDNA are found naturally in many bacteria and differ from other forms of DNA because the double helix shape most people are familiar with forms a circle, rather than the linear shape found in humans and most other organisms.
“pDNA is relatively easy to work with in the lab – it’s stable and easy ...
Ultrasound AI publishes landmark study demonstrating breakthrough in predicting delivery timing using AI and ultrasound images
2025-08-13
Ultrasound AI, a pioneer in artificial intelligence applications for medical imaging, today announced the publication of groundbreaking findings from its PAIR (Perinatal Artificial Intelligence in Ultrasound) Study in The Journal of Maternal-Fetal & Neonatal Medicine. The study was performed in collaboration with researchers at the University of Kentucky and validates Ultrasound AI’s proprietary technology that more accurately predicts time to delivery using only standard ultrasound images. This technology offers a non-invasive, efficient, and scalable tool ...
Scientists get back to basics with minimal plant genomes
2025-08-13
Background: Ancient events in plant evolution have left behind large, duplicated regions in their genomes.
New discovery: Salk Institute scientists found that deleting these large blocks of DNA can still lead to normal plants.
The findings demonstrate that large chromosomal deletions are a viable strategy in plant genetic engineering, which could now accelerate the development of streamlined, minimal plant genomes—a major goal in industries looking to create new plant-based biotechnologies.
The new study, led by Salk Research Professor Todd Michael and computational scientist Ashot Papikian, was published in Proceedings ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Blood cancer therapy: DKMS John Hansen Research Grant 2026 supports innovative research projects with almost €1 million
A hospital imaging technique used in cancer care improves the monitoring and treatment of atherosclerosis
Parents may have been more likely to cheat than non-parents during the COVID-19 pandemic
US clinicians are more likely to question credibility of Black than White patients in medical notes
Binge gaming was associated with depression, anxiety, and poor sleep, with boys more likely to report binge gaming than girls, in Hong Kong survey of 2,592 children and adolescents
North American monarch butterflies use magnetic fields to migrate to and from their overwintering sites - using cold temperatures to tune how they use magnetic fields - per experimental study, which m
Specially adapted drones successfully use a "tap and go" approach to apply monitoring tags to whales, speeding up the process and avoiding human interference
Analyzing the micromovements of recovering alcoholics in response to stimuli, along with their reaction times, might help predict if they will relapse following treatment
Stalagmites in Mexican caves reveal duration and severity of drought during the Maya collapse
Research Alert: A genetic twist that sets humans apart
Arctic reindeer populations could decline by 80 per cent by 2100
Cornell researchers explore alternatives to harmful insecticide
Fermentation method transforms unripe fruits into specialty coffees
Oncology, primary care coordination necessary for best cancer patient outcomes
Breakthrough discovery sparks new hope for breathing recovery after spinal cord injuries
Can officials say what they need to say about a health emergency in 280 characters?
United for answers: leading ALS organizations announce ‘Champion Insights’ to unlock why athletes and military members face higher ALS risk
Up to $5.2 million in federal funds will enable WashU to develop new biomanufacturing capabilities
AI-informed approach to CAR design enhances bi-specific CAR T cells
Discovery confirms early species of hominins co-existed in Ethiopia
‘Controlled evolution’ dramatically boosts pDNA production for biomedical manufacturing
Ultrasound AI publishes landmark study demonstrating breakthrough in predicting delivery timing using AI and ultrasound images
Scientists get back to basics with minimal plant genomes
‘Revolutionary’ seafloor fiber sensing reveals how falling ice drives glacial retreat in Greenland
Two-dose therapy for S. aureus bloodstream infections on par with standard treatment
Quitting smoking is associated with recovery from other addictions
Overhaul global food systems to avert worsening land crisis: Scientists
ASU scientists uncover new fossils – and a new species of ancient human ancestor
Would you like that coffee with iron?
County-level cervical cancer screening coverage and differences in incidence and mortality
[Press-News.org] Fermentation method transforms unripe fruits into specialty coffeesNormally discarde, green beans from the Arara cultivar were subjected to airless fermentation and produced high-quality beverages in blind tests. Researchers see potential for the product to be valued in domestic and foreign markets