Coffee guide

Coffee tasting glossary

The words coffee people use can sound like a secret language. They don’t have to. Here’s what the common tasting terms actually mean, in plain English, so you can describe your cup without the snobbery.

Acidity
The lively, tart quality in coffee, a technical attribute, not a flaw. Think the crisp snap of green apple or citrus, not “sour.” Cold brew naturally has less of it.
Brightness
How acidity feels in the mouth: a lift, a sparkle, a sense of liveliness. We say “bright” for the sensation and “acidity” for the underlying attribute.
Body
The weight and texture of the coffee: light and tea-like, medium, or full and coating. It’s about how heavy the cup feels, not how strong or intense it tastes.
Mouthfeel
The physical sensation of the coffee: silky, syrupy, creamy, thin, or drying. Closely related to body but more about texture than weight.
Finish (aftertaste)
What lingers after you swallow. A short finish disappears cleanly; a long finish keeps developing, sometimes sweet, sometimes bitter.
Sweetness
Natural sweetness from the coffee itself, not added sugar, ranging from clean and delicate to brown sugar, caramel, molasses, or fruit.
Fruity
Fruit-like flavors: citrus (lemon, bergamot), stone fruit (peach, cherry), tropical (mango, jackfruit), or berry. Natural processing tends to amplify these.
Floral
Flower-like aromatics: jasmine, rose, hibiscus, lavender. Common in high-grown Arabica and washed Ethiopian coffees.
Chocolate / Cocoa
A spectrum from cocoa powder to milk chocolate to dark chocolate to raw cacao nib. The comfort zone of most darker and roast-driven coffees.
Fermented / Winey
A boozy, wine-like quality from natural or anaerobic processing. Intentional and prized, a feature, not a defect.
Roast-driven
Flavors that come from roasting rather than the bean’s origin: toast, caramel, smoke. Dark roasts are the most roast-driven.
Processing
What’s done to the cherry after picking: washed, natural, honey, anaerobic. It shapes flavor as much as origin. Full guide →
Single origin
Coffee traceable to one place (a country, region, or single farm) rather than blended from many. Highlights a specific character.
Blend
Coffee mixed from multiple origins for consistency, balance, or a target flavor. Not lesser than single origin, just a different goal.
Extraction
The process of dissolving flavor out of ground coffee with water. Grind size, water temperature, and time are the main levers. Brew methods →
Mucilage
The sweet, sticky fruit layer between the cherry skin and the bean. How much of it stays on during drying drives washed vs honey vs natural flavor.
First crack
The audible pop during roasting (around 196°C) when the bean expands and real coffee flavor appears. Light roasts stop right around here.
Crema
The golden-brown foam on top of an espresso shot, formed by pressure forcing oils and gases into the brew.
Specialty grade
Coffee scored 80+ points out of 100 by certified graders. A quality benchmark, signalling distinct character and minimal defects.
Cupping
The standardized way pros taste and score coffee, slurping it from a spoon to assess aroma, flavor, acidity, body, and finish side by side.

Now put the words to work

Read a review and see these terms in action, one cold-brewed bean at a time.

Browse the reviews →