Coffee Cupping Standards

Coffee Cupping Standards

Cupping Standards

Coffee to Water Ratio for Cupping

When cupping, the ratio of 8.25 grams (whole bean) coffee (± 0.25 grams), to 5.07 fluid ounces (150 ml) water shall be used. When adjusting due to vessel size, a ratio of 1.63 grams (whole bean) coffee per 1 fluid ounce of water (or 0.055 g coffee per 1 ml water) shall be used. Cupping Vessel

Cupping vessels shall be of tempered glass or ceramic material. They shall be between 7 and 9 fluid ounces (207 ml to 266 ml), with a top diameter of between 3 and 3.5 inches (76 - 89 mm). All cups used shall be of identical volume, dimensions and material of manufacture, and have lids. Cupping Water Temperature

Cupping water temperature shall be 200°F ± 2°F (92.2 – 94.4°C) when poured on grounds. Cupping Water

Cupping Water shall meet all the requirements listed in the SCA Standard ‘Water for Brewing Specialty Coffee’, which can be found on the SCA Resources web page.

Grind for Cupping

The coffee used for cupping shall be ground so that 70-75 percent of the grinds pass through the 20 mesh sieve.

Roast for Cupping

The roasting of coffee for cupping shall take between 8 and 12 minutes, and shall be used for cupping between 8 and 24 hours after roasting. Roast Level for Cupping

The roast level for cupping shall be measured between 30 minutes and 4 hours after roasting using coffee ground to the SCA Standard Grind for Cupping and be measured on coffee at room temperature. The coffee shall meet the following measurements with a tolerance of ± 1.0 units:

Agtron “Gourmet”: 63.0
Agtron “Commercial”: 48.0
Colortrack: 62.0
Probat Colorette 3b: 96.0
Javalytics: same as Agtron measurement using either “Gourmet” or “Commercial” scales
RoastRite: same as Agtron measurements using “Gourmet” scale
LightTells CM-100 and CM-100 plus: same as Agtron measurements using “Gourmet” scale
Dipper KN-201: same as Agtron measurement using either “Gourmet” or “Commercial” scales
X-Rite PANTONE RM-200 COFFEE: same as Agtron measurements using “Gourmet” scale

Cupping Room Size

Cupping room minimum dimensions (for exactly one cupping table) shall be no smaller than 110 square feet (10.22 m2). The cupping room shall be sufficient size to accommodate all students for cupping at the same time. Each cupping table shall have 36-inch space surrounding the table for cuppers. No other furniture or fixtures shall be closer than 36-inches from the cupping table. If two or more tables are in the cupping room, a 60-inch radius shall be required between tables. Cupping Spoons

Cupping spoons shall hold 0.135 – 0.169 fluid ounces (4-5 ml) of coffee sample and should be of non-reactive metal.

Cupping Tables

Cupping tables (for 6 people) shall have a surface area of at least 10 square feet (0.93 m2). Cupping tables shall be a comfortable height for all student sizes, abilities, and disabilities. (Cupping table shall be stationary and the students shall move around the table. Spinning table are inefficient and do not allow each student to direct their own cupping experience and should only be used in extreme situations when the student has no mobility.)

Water Standards

Water For Brewing Standards

The Statistics & Standards Committee of the Specialty Coffee Association has determined the following standards for the water used to brew specialty coffee. For a superior quality extraction of coffee solids, the brewing water should have these characteristics:

Characteristic Target Acceptable Range Odor 1 Clean Fresh / Odor Free Chlorine None None Calcium Hardness 50-175 ppm CaCO3 50-175 ppm CaCO3 Alkalinity 40 ppm At or near 40-70 ppm CaCO3 pH 7.0 6 - 8

Odor is based on sensory olfactory determination.
Color is based on sensory visual determination.
TDS measured based on 4-4-2 conversion.

The Target is the most desirable point in the Acceptable Range, although falling within the range is considered meeting the standard. These variances are in place to take into consideration real world circumstances, and the target gives the optimum measurement of each characteristic to strive for.

For details of testing equipment & protocols, please see the SCA Water Quality Handbook. Brewing Standards Golden Cup Standard

Coffee shall exhibit a brew strength, measured in Total Dissolved Solids, of 11.5 to 13.5 grams per liter, corresponding to 1.15 to 1.35 “percent” on the SCA Brewing Control Chart, resulting from a solubles extraction yield of 18 to 22 percent*.

*See full explanation of standard in PDF or on the Brewing Best Practices page

SCAA Coffee Standards

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