Organic acids in coffee in relation to the degree of roast

The organic acids in hot water extracts of various coffee in relation to the degree of roast were studied by a combination of partition chromatography on silica gel and paper chromatography. Rf values of several phenolic acids are given. The following acids were found to be present in green as well as in roasted coffee: Acetic, propionic, butyric, valeric, malic, citric, quinic, caffeic, chlorogenic, isochlorogenic, neochlorogenic, a further isomer of chlorogenic, p-coumaryl quinic and two isomers of ferulyl quinic. Formic acid was found only in roasted coffee. The predominant acids, in coffee were chlorogenic and citric. Caffeic and quinic acids were present only in traces. During roasting the amounts of formic and acetic acids increased. Between 32 and 52 of the chlorogenic acid was destroyed during roasting, whereas the loss in citric acid was 33 to 56 and for malic acid the loss was 16 to 40, depending on the particular coffee and the final roast temperature. This simultaneous formation and decomposition of organic acids during roasting of coffee explains why the pH of coffee brews reaches a minimum with a light roasted coffee

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Main Authors: 86097 Lentner, C., 61688 Deatherage, F.E.
Format: biblioteca
Published: Set-
Subjects:COFFEA, FRUTO, TOSTADO, COMPOSICION, ACIDOS ORGANICOS, PROCESAMIENTO, PERGAMINO,
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spelling KOHA-OAI-BVE:801202020-02-03T21:47:33ZOrganic acids in coffee in relation to the degree of roast 86097 Lentner, C. 61688 Deatherage, F.E. Set-Oct 1959The organic acids in hot water extracts of various coffee in relation to the degree of roast were studied by a combination of partition chromatography on silica gel and paper chromatography. Rf values of several phenolic acids are given. The following acids were found to be present in green as well as in roasted coffee: Acetic, propionic, butyric, valeric, malic, citric, quinic, caffeic, chlorogenic, isochlorogenic, neochlorogenic, a further isomer of chlorogenic, p-coumaryl quinic and two isomers of ferulyl quinic. Formic acid was found only in roasted coffee. The predominant acids, in coffee were chlorogenic and citric. Caffeic and quinic acids were present only in traces. During roasting the amounts of formic and acetic acids increased. Between 32 and 52 of the chlorogenic acid was destroyed during roasting, whereas the loss in citric acid was 33 to 56 and for malic acid the loss was 16 to 40, depending on the particular coffee and the final roast temperature. This simultaneous formation and decomposition of organic acids during roasting of coffee explains why the pH of coffee brews reaches a minimum with a light roasted coffeeThe organic acids in hot water extracts of various coffee in relation to the degree of roast were studied by a combination of partition chromatography on silica gel and paper chromatography. Rf values of several phenolic acids are given. The following acids were found to be present in green as well as in roasted coffee: Acetic, propionic, butyric, valeric, malic, citric, quinic, caffeic, chlorogenic, isochlorogenic, neochlorogenic, a further isomer of chlorogenic, p-coumaryl quinic and two isomers of ferulyl quinic. Formic acid was found only in roasted coffee. The predominant acids, in coffee were chlorogenic and citric. Caffeic and quinic acids were present only in traces. During roasting the amounts of formic and acetic acids increased. Between 32 and 52 of the chlorogenic acid was destroyed during roasting, whereas the loss in citric acid was 33 to 56 and for malic acid the loss was 16 to 40, depending on the particular coffee and the final roast temperature. This simultaneous formation and decomposition of organic acids during roasting of coffee explains why the pH of coffee brews reaches a minimum with a light roasted coffeeCOFFEAFRUTOTOSTADOCOMPOSICIONACIDOS ORGANICOSPROCESAMIENTOPERGAMINOFood Research (EUA)
institution IICA
collection Koha
country Costa Rica
countrycode CR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode cat-sibiica
tag biblioteca
region America Central
libraryname Sistema de Bibliotecas IICA/CATIE
topic COFFEA
FRUTO
TOSTADO
COMPOSICION
ACIDOS ORGANICOS
PROCESAMIENTO
PERGAMINO
COFFEA
FRUTO
TOSTADO
COMPOSICION
ACIDOS ORGANICOS
PROCESAMIENTO
PERGAMINO
spellingShingle COFFEA
FRUTO
TOSTADO
COMPOSICION
ACIDOS ORGANICOS
PROCESAMIENTO
PERGAMINO
COFFEA
FRUTO
TOSTADO
COMPOSICION
ACIDOS ORGANICOS
PROCESAMIENTO
PERGAMINO
86097 Lentner, C.
61688 Deatherage, F.E.
Organic acids in coffee in relation to the degree of roast
description The organic acids in hot water extracts of various coffee in relation to the degree of roast were studied by a combination of partition chromatography on silica gel and paper chromatography. Rf values of several phenolic acids are given. The following acids were found to be present in green as well as in roasted coffee: Acetic, propionic, butyric, valeric, malic, citric, quinic, caffeic, chlorogenic, isochlorogenic, neochlorogenic, a further isomer of chlorogenic, p-coumaryl quinic and two isomers of ferulyl quinic. Formic acid was found only in roasted coffee. The predominant acids, in coffee were chlorogenic and citric. Caffeic and quinic acids were present only in traces. During roasting the amounts of formic and acetic acids increased. Between 32 and 52 of the chlorogenic acid was destroyed during roasting, whereas the loss in citric acid was 33 to 56 and for malic acid the loss was 16 to 40, depending on the particular coffee and the final roast temperature. This simultaneous formation and decomposition of organic acids during roasting of coffee explains why the pH of coffee brews reaches a minimum with a light roasted coffee
format
topic_facet COFFEA
FRUTO
TOSTADO
COMPOSICION
ACIDOS ORGANICOS
PROCESAMIENTO
PERGAMINO
author 86097 Lentner, C.
61688 Deatherage, F.E.
author_facet 86097 Lentner, C.
61688 Deatherage, F.E.
author_sort 86097 Lentner, C.
title Organic acids in coffee in relation to the degree of roast
title_short Organic acids in coffee in relation to the degree of roast
title_full Organic acids in coffee in relation to the degree of roast
title_fullStr Organic acids in coffee in relation to the degree of roast
title_full_unstemmed Organic acids in coffee in relation to the degree of roast
title_sort organic acids in coffee in relation to the degree of roast
publishDate Set-
work_keys_str_mv AT 86097lentnerc organicacidsincoffeeinrelationtothedegreeofroast
AT 61688deatheragefe organicacidsincoffeeinrelationtothedegreeofroast
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