decaffeinated_coffee
Table of Contents
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Methods of Decaffeination
There are several common methods used to decaffeinate coffee, each with different impacts on flavor and use of chemicals.
Method | Chemicals Used? | Flavor Retention | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Swiss Water Process | No | Excellent | Uses only water and osmosis. Popular among specialty roasters. Certified organic-friendly. |
Carbon Dioxide (CO₂) Process | No | Excellent | Uses pressurized CO₂ to extract caffeine. Expensive but great flavor retention. |
Ethyl Acetate (EA) / Sugarcane Process | Yes (natural EA) | Very Good | Uses naturally derived EA from sugarcane or fruit. Often called “natural decaf.” |
Methylene Chloride Process | Yes (synthetic) | Good to Moderate | Common in commercial decaf. Trace residues regulated. |
Trichloroethylene (obsolete) | Yes (dangerous) | Poor | No longer used due to health risks. |
Coffee Shop Decaf Method Comparison
Coffee Shop | Decaf Method(s) Used | Chemicals Used? | Flavor Retention | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Starbucks | Methylene Chloride Process (most blends), Swiss Water (some Reserve) | Yes (MC) / No (SWP) | Good (MC) / Excellent (SWP) | Pike Place and most standard decaf use MC. Limited Reserve decaf may use SWP. |
Peet’s Coffee | Water Process (Swiss Water for retail bags), MC for some café brews | Yes (MC) / No (SWP) | Very Good | Bagged beans typically use water process; check in-store for café methods. |
Revival Café (Boston area) | Swiss Water or EA Natural (depends on roaster) | No / Yes (EA) | Excellent | Likely sources from roasters like George Howell or Tandem that use SWP or natural EA. |
Tatte Bakery & Café | Typically Swiss Water Process | No | Excellent | Uses George Howell Coffee and similar roasters that favor chemical-free methods. |
Summary
- Best Flavor & Chemical-Free: Swiss Water Process and CO₂ Process
- Used by Mass Market Chains: Starbucks and Peet’s often use Methylene Chloride
- Used by Specialty Shops: Revival and Tatte favor Swiss Water or Sugarcane EA
decaffeinated_coffee.1754252122.txt.gz · Last modified: by Steve Isenberg