The Roaster's Blog
November 19, 2025
In specialty coffee, processing is the bridge between the coffee tree and the green beans a roaster receives. It covers everything that happens to the cherry after harvest: how the skin and fruit are removed, how long it ferments, and how it is dried. These steps dramatically affect acidity, sweetness, body, and aromatic complexity in the final cup.
Two coffees from the same farm, variety, and altitude can taste completely different if one is processed as a washed lot and the other as a natural or honey lot. Understanding processing helps drinkers choose coffees they will love more consistently, and it helps roasters like Beanlytics design roast profiles that highlight what each lot does best.
In the washed (or wet) process, ripe cherries are depulped soon after picking to remove the skin and most of the fruit. The sticky mucilage still coating the beans is then broken down through fermentation in water tanks or channels, and finally washed away before the beans are dried.
Because the fruit is removed quickly, washed coffees tend to express the intrinsic character of the seed and terroir: altitude, soil, variety, and microclimate. In the cup this often means higher perceived acidity, lighter body, and very clean, transparent flavor—think citrus, florals, stone fruit, and tea‑like structure. This is why washed processing is common in places like Ethiopia, Kenya, and Central America, where producers want to showcase bright, nuanced profiles.
For specialty roasters, washed coffees are ideal when the goal is precision and clarity. At Beanlytics, a washed Ethiopian might be roasted to highlight jasmine, bergamot, and lemon, with a delicate body that rewards precise brewing and good water chemistry.
The natural (or dry) process is one of the oldest methods. Instead of removing the fruit right away, producers dry the whole cherry on raised beds or patios, turning it regularly for even drying. Only after the cherry is fully dried is the husk mechanically hulled off to reveal the bean.
Leaving the bean inside the fruit for weeks allows more contact with the cherry’s sugars and organic acids. This often yields bigger body, higher sweetness, and intense fruity aromatics, such as blueberry, strawberry jam, tropical fruit, and sometimes wine‑like or fermented notes. Naturals can be polarizing: when well managed, they are complex and juicy; when poorly dried or over‑fermented, they can taste boozy, musty, or dirty.
Many Brazilian and Ethiopian coffees use natural processing to build sweetness and roundness, making them popular choices for espresso or filter drinkers looking for depth and fruit‑forward profiles. For Beanlytics, a natural lot might be used to build a chewy, berry‑driven espresso that stands out in milk drinks.
Honey processing sits between washed and natural. Producers remove the cherry skin but intentionally leave some or all of the sticky mucilage on the beans as they dry. The beans, coated in this sugary layer, are laid out on raised beds or patios and dried without a full water fermentation stage. No actual honey is involved—the name comes from the texture and color of the mucilage.
Because the beans stay in contact with mucilage but not the full cherry, honey coffees often combine the clarity of washed lots with the sweetness and fruit of naturals. Expect medium body, syrupy sweetness, and notes of honey, brown sugar, stone fruit, and ripe red fruit, with generally cleaner acidity than a full natural. Different “colors” (yellow, red, black honey) indicate how much mucilage and shade were used: darker honeys usually mean more mucilage and longer, slower drying, leading to punchier, more fermented flavors.
For roasters, honey coffees offer a playground for balance—enough sweetness and texture for espresso, yet enough structure and definition for filter. A Beanlytics honey‑processed lot might target caramel, nectarine, and florals, perfect for brewers who want something rich but not wild.
Specialty coffee has seen an explosion of experimental processes in recent years: anaerobic fermentation, carbonic maceration, double‑washed, lactic and yeast‑inoculated lots, and more. These methods manipulate fermentation environments (oxygen levels, temperature, time, microbial cultures) to push flavor even further.
Anaerobic and carbonic maceration can enhance intense fruit, spice, and ferment character, sometimes reminiscent of tropical cocktails or fruit ciders. Extended and controlled fermentations can create layered complexity, but they are also risky and require strict monitoring to avoid defects. In competitions and limited releases, these experimental lots showcase just how far processing can shape a coffee’s sensory identity.
From a chemistry perspective, processing influences:
In sensory terms, washed coffees generally highlight acidity, clarity, and origin character, naturals emphasize body, sweetness, and fruit, and honeys aim for balance and rounded sweetness with defined structure. Experimental processes often dial up intensity and uniqueness, sometimes at the expense of everyday drinkability.
For someone just getting into specialty coffee, processing is one of the most practical “filters” for choosing beans you are likely to enjoy:
At Beanlytics, processing is part of how green coffee is selected and roasted. A washed Ethiopian might be profiled to highlight florals and citrus at a lighter development, while a natural Brazil could get a slightly longer roast to emphasize chocolate and berry sweetness for espresso. By reading the process on the label and pairing it with your preferred brew method and water, you can consistently land on cups that match your taste.
To make the most of each process at home:
Processing is one of the most powerful levers in specialty coffee flavor. It is where producers imprint their craft on the raw cherry, long before roasters and baristas get involved. For drinkers, learning the difference between washed, natural, honey, and experimental methods turns the coffee menu from a mystery into a map: each process hints at what you are about to taste.
By paying attention to processing—and pairing it with thoughtful roasting, brewing, and water chemistry—Beanlytics Roasters aims to give you cups that are not just good, but genuinely memorable. As one of the best specialty coffee roasters in Vancouver, Beanlytics Roasters focuses on roast profiles that let each process speak clearly in the cup.
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