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%% I've created a comprehensive note on Specialty Coffee Definition! This covers both the technical standard and the broader meaning:

Key sections:

The Official Definition:

  • 80+ points on SCA cupping protocol (the core requirement)
  • Detailed breakdown of the 100-point scoring system
  • The 10 cupping attributes explained
  • Additional physical and preparation requirements

The Cupping Protocol:

  • How specialty coffee is evaluated (8.25g, 150ml, 93°C, 4-5 minutes)
  • Why 5 cups minimum
  • Multiple cupper requirements
  • Scoring methodology

Physical Requirements:

  • Green coffee defect limits (max 5 Category 1 defects)
  • Visual assessment standards
  • Moisture content, water activity, storage requirements
  • How poor roasting or brewing can ruin specialty green coffee

Beyond the Score:

  • Traceability requirements
  • Economic model (quality-based pricing vs commodity)
  • Direct trade relationships
  • The broader philosophy of excellence, transparency, sustainability

Evolution of the Definition:

  • Historical development (1970s Erna Knutsen → 1982 SCAA → 1990s formalisation → current)
  • Current debates (should sustainability/ethics be required?)
  • Regional variations and interpretations

Practical Implications:

  • For producers (achieving 80+, economics, quality improvement)
  • For roasters (verification, maintenance, communication)
  • For cafés (service standards, the promise, the risk)
  • For consumers (what to expect, ask, and not assume)

Common Misconceptions:

  • Specialty ≠ just expensive, single origin, light roast, complicated brewing
  • Fair Trade/Organic are separate standards
  • Quality ≠ universal preference

Criticisms and Limitations:

  • Scoring subjectivity debates
  • Access and equity concerns
  • Environmental questions
  • Power imbalances in the supply chain

The Future:

  • Potential sustainability integration
  • Social justice requirements
  • Scientific refinement possibilities
  • Climate adaptation considerations

The note provides both the rigorous technical definition (essential for professionals) and the accessible explanation (valuable for consumers and enthusiasts). It's honest about limitations whilst explaining why the 80-point standard matters. Perfect for Coffeepedia's educational mission!

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Specialty Coffee Definition

Specialty coffee is coffee that scores 80 points or above on a standardised 100-point cupping scale, is free from primary defects, properly processed and stored, and prepared in ways that express its inherent qualities. But this technical definition only begins to explain what specialty coffee truly represents—a complete paradigm shift in how coffee is grown, traded, roasted, prepared, and appreciated.

The Official Definition

Specialty Coffee Association (SCA) Standard

The Core Requirement: Coffee must score 80 points or above on the SCA cupping protocol to qualify as specialty grade.

The Scoring System:

  • 90-100 points: Outstanding (extremely rare, <1% of all coffee)
  • 85-89.99 points: Excellent (top-tier specialty)
  • 80-84.99 points: Very Good (specialty grade threshold)
  • 75-79.99 points: Good (above average, not specialty)
  • 70-74.99 points: Fair (typical commercial grade)
  • Below 70: Below Standard (commodity grade)

Additional Requirements: Beyond the score, specialty coffee must also be:

  • Defect-free: No primary defects (Category 1)
  • Properly processed: Clean, controlled processing
  • Correctly stored: Maintained quality during storage and transport
  • Freshly roasted: Roasted to express inherent characteristics
  • Properly prepared: Brewed using appropriate methods

The Coffee Quality Institute (CQI) Definition

CQI, which administers the Q Grader certification programme, uses the same 80+ point threshold but emphasises:

Quality at Origin:

  • Green coffee must meet physical standards
  • Cup quality verified through standardised cupping
  • Traceability required
  • Processing and storage properly documented

Evaluation Consistency:

  • Calibrated Q Graders conduct evaluations
  • Standardised protocols ensure repeatability
  • Multiple cuppers verify scores
  • Documentation maintained

The Cupping Protocol

How Specialty Coffee is Scored

The SCA Cupping Form: Coffee is evaluated on 10 attributes, each scored individually:

Scored Attributes (0-10 scale for most):

  1. Fragrance/Aroma (combined score, max 10)

    • Fragrance: smell of dry grounds
    • Aroma: smell of brewed coffee
    • Complexity and quality assessed
    • Flavour (max 10)

    • Overall flavour impression

    • Combination of taste and aromatics
    • Quality, intensity, and complexity
    • Aftertaste (max 10)

    • Length of positive flavour after swallowing

    • Quality of finish
    • Pleasant vs unpleasant persistence
    • Acidity (max 10)

    • Brightness and liveliness

    • Quality, not just intensity
    • Pleasant, crisp vs sour, sharp
    • Body (max 10)

    • Mouthfeel and weight

    • Texture and tactile sensation
    • Fuller bodies typically score higher (but quality matters)
    • Balance (max 10)

    • How flavour, aftertaste, acidity, and body work together

    • Harmony of components
    • No single element overwhelming
    • Uniformity (max 10)

    • Consistency across 5 cups

    • Each cup scored 2 points if consistent
    • Variation indicates processing inconsistency
    • Clean Cup (max 10)

    • Absence of defects from first impression to aftertaste

    • Each clean cup receives 2 points (5 cups total)
    • Any defect drops score
    • Sweetness (max 10)

    • Fullness of sweetness

    • Positive mouth sensation
    • Each sweet cup receives 2 points (5 cups total)
    • Overall (max 10)

    • Cupper's holistic assessment

    • Personal evaluation of quality
    • Reflects overall impression

Final Score Calculation: The 10 attribute scores are totalled, then cupper points (defects subtracted, bonuses added) are applied to reach final score out of 100.

The Protocol Itself

Standardised Preparation:

  • Sample size: 8.25 grams coffee
  • Water volume: 150ml
  • Water temperature: 93°C (200°F)
  • Water quality: Clean, neutral, appropriate TDS
  • Grind size: Medium-coarse (similar to sea salt)
  • Brew time: 4-5 minutes steep
  • Evaluation: Break crust at 3-4 minutes, taste after cooling

Five Cups Minimum: Each coffee cupped in at least 5 cups to assess:

  • Uniformity (are all cups the same?)
  • Clean cup (are any cups defective?)
  • Consistency (is quality repeatable?)

Multiple Cuppers: For certification or important evaluation:

  • Minimum 3 trained cuppers
  • Scores averaged
  • Significant variance requires re-cupping
  • Calibration sessions ensure alignment

Physical Requirements

Green Coffee Standards

Beyond the Cup Score: Physical inspection must show:

Defect Count (350g sample):

  • Category 1 defects: Maximum 5 full defects
    • Full black beans
    • Full sour beans
    • Dried cherry in washed lots
    • Severe insect damage
    • Foreign matter
  • Category 2 defects: Variable tolerance
    • Partial black/sour
    • Parchment
    • Floaters
    • Broken beans
    • Hull/husk

Visual Assessment:

  • Colour: Uniform, appropriate for processing method
  • Size: Relatively consistent (graded by screen size)
  • Density: Appropriate weight (altitude indicator)
  • Moisture content: 10-12% typically
  • Water activity: Below 0.70 for stability

Processing Quality:

  • Clean processing (no ferment, mould, contamination)
  • Proper drying (even, controlled)
  • Appropriate storage (maintained quality)
  • Minimal breakage or damage

Preparation and Brewing

To Maintain Specialty Status:

Roasting Requirements:

  • Roasted to express origin characteristics
  • No severe roast defects (tipping, scorching)
  • Appropriate development for coffee type
  • Fresh (typically within 2-8 weeks of roast)

Brewing Requirements:

  • Proper grind size for method
  • Appropriate water (clean, balanced minerals)
  • Correct brew ratio
  • Proper temperature
  • Clean equipment
  • Skilled preparation

The Reality: Specialty green coffee can become non-specialty coffee through:

  • Poor roasting (under-developed, scorched, stale)
  • Poor brewing (wrong parameters, dirty equipment)
  • Age (stale coffee loses specialty quality)

What Specialty Coffee Means Beyond the Score

The Broader Definition

Quality Philosophy: Specialty coffee represents commitment to:

  • Excellence: Pursuing the best, not just acceptable
  • Transparency: Knowing and sharing origin, processing, pricing
  • Sustainability: Viable for farmers, environment, future
  • Craft: Skilled preparation at every stage
  • Education: Teaching and learning continuously
  • Community: Relationships throughout supply chain

Traceability

Specialty Coffee Identity: Beyond just scoring 80+, specialty coffee should be traceable to:

  • Farm or estate: Specific producer
  • Region: Geographic origin
  • Altitude: Growing elevation
  • Variety: Cultivar(s) used
  • Processing method: Washed, natural, honey, experimental
  • Harvest period: When picked
  • Lot number: Specific batch tracking

The Contrast:

  • Commodity coffee: "Coffee" (no origin information)
  • Commercial premium: "Colombian Coffee" (country only)
  • Specialty coffee: "Natural process Yirgacheffe from Worka Chelbesa washing station, Gedeb district, Heirloom varieties, 2100m elevation, lot 347, harvested January 2024"

Economic Model

Pricing Structure: Specialty coffee operates on quality-based pricing, not commodity pricing:

Commodity Coffee (C-Market):

  • Traded on futures exchange
  • Price based on supply/demand, not quality
  • Typically £1.50-3.00/kg (fluctuates wildly)
  • No quality differentiation above minimums
  • No direct farmer relationship

Specialty Coffee:

  • Price negotiated based on quality score
  • Typically £4-15/kg for specialty grade
  • Exceptional coffees: £20-100+/kg
  • Competition lots: Record £500+/kg
  • Direct relationships common
  • Quality improvements rewarded

Relationship Model

Direct Trade and Transparency: Specialty coffee emphasises:

  • Direct relationships: Roasters know farmers
  • Multi-year commitments: Stability for planning
  • Technical support: Quality improvement assistance
  • Transparent pricing: Farmgate prices disclosed
  • Feedback loops: Cupping notes shared with farmers
  • Shared risk: Partnership approach

The Impact: Farmers incentivised to:

  • Invest in quality (processing, picking, storage)
  • Experiment and innovate
  • Document and communicate their work
  • Build brand and reputation

The Evolution of the Definition

Historical Development

1970s - Erna Knutsen:

  • Coined "specialty coffee"
  • Defined as coffee from special microclimates
  • Emphasis on terroir and origin
  • No formal scoring system yet

1982 - SCAA Founded:

  • Standardisation efforts begin
  • Cupping protocols developed
  • "Specialty grade" category established

1990s - Formalisation:

  • 80-point threshold established
  • Cupping form standardised
  • Q Grader programme created (1996)
  • Consistent evaluation possible

2000s - Globalisation:

  • SCA cupping standard worldwide
  • Q Graders in producing countries
  • Competition culture reinforces standards
  • Digital score tracking

2010s - Refinement:

  • Increased precision in scoring
  • Sensory lexicon development
  • Scientific backing for standards
  • Greater consistency globally

2020s - Current:

  • 80+ point standard universal
  • Additional emphasis on sustainability
  • Ethical sourcing increasingly required
  • Climate impact considerations

Current Debates

Is the Definition Complete?

Arguments for Expansion: Should specialty coffee also require:

  • Sustainability certification? Environmental standards
  • Living wage verification? Economic justice
  • Carbon neutrality? Climate responsibility
  • Organic certification? Agricultural practices
  • Diversity and inclusion? Social equity

Arguments Against:

  • Quality is measurable, ethics are complex
  • Too many requirements reduce accessibility
  • Each adds cost and complexity
  • Current definition focuses on what's verifiable
  • Additional certifications can supplement, not replace

The Current Consensus: The 80+ point threshold remains the baseline definition. Sustainability, ethics, and environmental considerations are increasingly expected but not technically required for the "specialty" designation. However, the specialty coffee movement's values increasingly demand these additional commitments.

Regional Variations and Interpretations

Different Markets, Different Emphasis

Nordic Countries:

  • 80+ still the standard
  • Emphasis on ultra-light roasting
  • Fruit and floral notes prioritised
  • Often 85+ expected in practice

Australia/New Zealand:

  • 80+ standard applies
  • More forgiving of darker roasts
  • Espresso-focused evaluation
  • Approachable, less pretentious

Japan:

  • 80+ adopted but...
  • Traditional kissaten may not score
  • Emphasis on precision and ritual
  • Quality defined beyond cupping score alone

United States:

  • 80+ standard widespread
  • Competition influence strong
  • Wide interpretation of specialty
  • Commercial "specialty" may not meet standards

Producing Countries:

  • 80+ standard for export specialty
  • Local markets may differ
  • Education ongoing about standards
  • Pride in achieving specialty scores

Practical Implications

For Producers

Achieving Specialty Grade:

Required Practices:

  • Selective picking (ripe cherries only)
  • Clean, controlled processing
  • Proper drying (10-12% moisture)
  • Defect sorting (manual or mechanical)
  • Quality storage (cool, dry, stable)
  • Lot separation (maintain quality levels)

The Economics:

  • Specialty price premium: 2-10x commodity price
  • Investment required: processing infrastructure, training, time
  • Risk: Not all coffee will score 80+
  • Reward: Direct relationships, stable income, recognition

Quality Improvement:

  • Cupping feedback from buyers
  • Processing experimentation
  • Harvest timing optimisation
  • Post-harvest handling
  • Storage improvements

For Roasters

Sourcing Specialty Coffee:

Verification:

  • Request cupping scores
  • Ask for Q Grader evaluation
  • Cup samples before purchasing
  • Visit origins when possible
  • Build direct relationships

Quality Maintenance:

  • Proper green coffee storage
  • Sample roast evaluation
  • Roast to express characteristics
  • Quality control cupping
  • Fresh roasting and distribution

Communication:

  • Share cupping scores with customers
  • Provide origin information
  • Explain what specialty means
  • Educate about quality and price
  • Transparency in sourcing

For Cafés

Serving Specialty Coffee:

Requirements:

  • Source verified specialty coffee
  • Fresh roasting (typically <4 weeks)
  • Skilled barista preparation
  • Proper equipment (grinder, machine, water)
  • Appropriate brewing parameters
  • Clean, maintained equipment

The Promise: When a café claims "specialty coffee":

  • Quality should be verifiable (80+ scores)
  • Preparation should be skilled
  • Origin information available
  • Pricing reflects quality
  • Education offered to customers

The Risk: "Specialty" used as marketing without standards undermines the definition. Cafés should be able to prove their coffee meets specialty criteria.

For Consumers

What to Expect:

From Specialty Coffee:

  • Scored 80+ points by trained cuppers
  • Origin information available
  • Processing method disclosed
  • Roast date visible
  • Properly prepared
  • Higher price (reflecting quality and ethics)

What to Ask:

  • "What's the cupping score?"
  • "Who's the producer?"
  • "What's the processing method?"
  • "When was this roasted?"
  • "Why does it cost this much?"

What Not to Assume:

  • "Specialty" doesn't mean "will taste good to me" (personal preference varies)
  • Higher score doesn't always mean better (beyond ~88, preference dominates)
  • Specialty doesn't guarantee ethical sourcing (though correlation exists)
  • Expensive doesn't equal specialty (without verification)

Common Misconceptions

What Specialty Coffee Is NOT

Misconception 1: Specialty = Expensive

  • Reality: Specialty coffee costs more but expensive coffee isn't automatically specialty
  • Why: Some high-priced coffee is marketing, not quality
  • Solution: Ask for verification (cupping scores, origin info)

Misconception 2: Specialty = Single Origin

  • Reality: Blends can be specialty if each component scores 80+
  • Why: Origin doesn't determine quality, cup quality does
  • Note: Many excellent specialty blends exist

Misconception 3: Specialty = Fair Trade or Organic

  • Reality: Separate certifications, different standards
  • Overlap: Specialty often includes fair/organic, but not required
  • Distinction: Specialty = quality, Fair Trade = minimum price, Organic = farming method

Misconception 4: Specialty = Light Roast

  • Reality: Specialty coffee can be roasted light, medium, or dark
  • Nuance: Lighter roasts common in specialty (origin expression) but not required
  • Standards: Roast level doesn't define specialty, quality does

Misconception 5: Specialty = Complicated Brewing

  • Reality: Specialty coffee can be brewed simply
  • Truth: Quality coffee is more forgiving than poor coffee
  • Note: Precision helps maximize potential, but simple methods work

Misconception 6: All Expensive Coffee Is Specialty

  • Reality: Price doesn't equal quality without verification
  • Examples: Kopi Luwak, Jamaica Blue Mountain often overpriced relative to quality
  • Solution: Look for cupping scores and Q Grader verification

Misconception 7: Specialty Tastes "Better" to Everyone

  • Reality: Specialty = objectively higher quality, not universal preference
  • Analogy: Fine wine vs wine you prefer to drink
  • Truth: Education often increases appreciation, but preference is personal

Criticisms and Limitations

The Scoring System

Criticisms:

Subjectivity:

  • Even calibrated cuppers vary slightly
  • Cultural bias in flavour preferences
  • Structural bias toward certain profiles
  • "Specialty" favours brightness and complexity over other qualities

Response:

  • Multiple cuppers reduce individual bias
  • Calibration sessions align perspectives
  • Standardised protocol increases objectivity
  • System still more objective than alternatives

Score Clustering:

  • Most specialty coffee: 82-86 points
  • Few coffees below 78 or above 88
  • Small score differences meaningful?
  • Difficult to distinguish 83 from 84 in blind cupping

Response:

  • Clusters reflect reality (most coffee is average)
  • Small differences matter in competition context
  • Score is guide, not absolute truth
  • Multiple cuppings provide better picture

Access and Equity

The Problem:

Expensive to Achieve:

  • Quality infrastructure costs money
  • Processing equipment investment
  • Training and education costs
  • Many smallholders can't afford improvements

Scoring Access:

  • Q Graders concentrated in consuming countries
  • Expensive to get coffee scored
  • Producing countries need more Q Graders
  • Feedback loops sometimes broken

Market Power:

  • Roasters/buyers often determine what's "specialty"
  • Farmers depend on buyer evaluation
  • Power imbalance in relationship
  • Potential for exploitation despite "specialty" label

Solutions in Progress:

  • Q Grader training in producing countries
  • Producer cupping programmes
  • Farmer-owned processing facilities
  • Transparent pricing standards
  • Direct feedback systems

Environmental Concerns

The Question: Does specialty coffee help or harm environment?

Potential Benefits:

  • Higher prices enable sustainable practices
  • Shade-grown often specialty
  • Quality focus encourages biodiversity
  • Long-term relationships support land stewardship

Potential Harms:

  • Specialty coffee still shipped globally
  • Processing water use intensive
  • Packaging waste (small batch, frequent shipments)
  • Carbon footprint significant

The Reality: Specialty coffee alone doesn't guarantee sustainability. Additional commitments and certifications needed.

The Future of the Definition

Potential Evolution

Possible Changes (2025-2035):

Sustainability Integration:

  • Carbon footprint disclosure required?
  • Water use documentation standard?
  • Environmental certification expected?
  • Regenerative agriculture emphasis?

Social Justice:

  • Living wage verification?
  • Gender equity requirements?
  • Labour practice transparency?
  • Community impact reporting?

Scientific Refinement:

  • Spectroscopy-assisted cupping?
  • Objective flavour measurement?
  • Chemical analysis alongside sensory?
  • AI-assisted calibration?

Climate Adaptation:

  • New varieties accepted?
  • Different terroir expressions?
  • Processing innovation embrace?
  • Score system evolution for changing coffee?

Fundamental Questions

Will 80+ Remain the Standard?

  • Likely yes—established, understood, functional
  • But meaning may expand beyond score
  • Additional requirements probable
  • Core definition stable

Will Specialty Coffee Become Mainstream?

  • Already happening in developed countries
  • Definition may bifurcate: technical vs colloquial
  • Quality baseline rising (yesterday's specialty = tomorrow's standard)
  • Education spreading

What Comes After "Specialty"?

  • Ultra-premium categories (90+)?
  • Sustainability-verified specialty?
  • Climate-positive coffee?
  • New frameworks emerging?

Key Takeaways

Specialty coffee is defined by:

  1. 80+ points on SCA cupping protocol (non-negotiable)
  2. Zero primary defects in green coffee
  3. Proper processing and storage maintaining quality
  4. Skilled preparation expressing characteristics
  5. Traceability to origin, producer, lot
  6. Transparency in sourcing and pricing
  7. Quality focus throughout supply chain

Why the definition matters:

  • Creates measurable standards
  • Enables quality-based pricing
  • Rewards excellence in production
  • Guides consumer expectations
  • Provides framework for improvement
  • Distinguishes craft from commodity

What the definition doesn't cover:

  • Sustainability (though increasingly expected)
  • Ethics (though values align)
  • Personal taste preference
  • Roast level or brewing method
  • Price (though correlation exists)

Remember: The 80-point threshold is baseline, not destination. The specialty coffee definition provides objective quality standards whilst the specialty coffee movement pursues excellence, sustainability, and equity throughout the supply chain. The score opens the door; the values define the movement.



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See also: Specialty vs Commercial Coffee | Quality Standards | Coffee Evaluation