Friday, December 26, 2014

What is instant Coffee?

Instant coffee entails the extraction of ground coffee with warm water to form a concentrated liquid brew, followed by removal of the water from the brew by some method of dehydration. The residue which is left is instant coffee.

Among instant coffee advantages: instant coffee stays fresh longer than ordinary roasted coffee; it eliminates the mistakes that can occur when brewing ordinary roasted coffee; it can be made quickly; it can be mixed by the cup to individual taste and it contains somewhat less caffeine than regularly brewed coffee.

Instant coffee is produced after grinding and extraction by percolation. Instant coffee is prepared in either of the following way:
*By forcing an atomized spray of very strong coffee extract through a jet of hot air. This evaporates the water in the extract and leaves dried coffee particles, which are packaged as instant, or soluble, coffee. Most spray-dried instant coffees have been marketed in a granular form, rather than the small special spray-dried form, since the mid-1960s.

*By freeze-drying, which results in a product that looks somewhat like ground roasted coffee and retains some of coffee’s aroma. Freeze dried coffee has a longer shelf life than spray-dried coffee.

Spray and freeze fried coffee extract have generally lost their original volatile flavor and aroma compounds. The flavor of instant coffee can be enhanced by recovering and returning to the extract or finished dry products some of the natural aroma lost in processing.

The aroma constituents from the grinders, percolation vents and evaporators may be added directly or in concentrated or fractioned form to achieve the desirable product attributes.

Instant coffee must be kept dry in a tightly container or it will become a nasty tasting lump and always spoon it out with a clean dry spoon to keep moisture out of the granules.
What is instant Coffee?

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