The Process of Coffee Decaffeination
There are many different major money making
enterprises all around the world. One of these major
money making enterprises is the beverage industry that
has many competing advertisement messages on a daily
basis that is aimed directly at the consumers. There
are many different beverages that can be classified
into different marketing categories such as ones with
caffeine or ones with no caffeine. These beverages
include coffees, teas, sodas, and bottled water which
have one major ingredient – caffeine or no caffeine.
In the non-caffeine market segment, consumers will
notice many terms used to describe the beverages such
“decaffeinated”, “naturally decaffeinated”, and
“caffeine-free”. As a general rule, beverages should
only be considered “caffeine-free” if there was never
any caffeine in the ingredients to begin with. This
rules out all coffee beans and tea leaves because both
contain caffeine in their unprocessed form. For coffee
and tea lovers who do not want caffeine in their
drink, they should pay attention to both natural
variations in caffeine content of various teas and
coffee (some have more and some have less) as well as
the physical decaffeination process used to
manufacture a specific coffee or tea product.
With the different methods of decaffeination, that is
no method that can 100% remove the caffeine from the
coffee beans. While it is not considered a law but
rather a U.S. standard, a beverage may only be labeled
“decaffeinated” only if 97% of the caffeine content
has been removed. Europe generally follows a higher
standard which is closer to 99%, but still not
foolproof. Beyond the manufacturers’ control, brewing
methods and steeping times (length of time a tea bag
is left sitting in your hot water cup) drastically
affect the level of caffeine that you end up
consuming.
Percentages are where thinking about the actual
caffeine content of different types of coffee beans,
roasts and teas can be useful. For example, Arabica
beans normally contain roughly one-half the caffeine
of Robusta beans. So whereas a Robusta brew may have
100 mg of caffeine and its decaffeinated equivalent 3
mg, the equal serving of Arabica brew would contain
about 50 mg of caffeine and 1.5 mg in the decaf
version. Teas also have naturally lower caffeine
content than coffee – of any variety. Once you read
about the industrial methods of extracting caffeine
from a coffee bean, you may want to carefully consider
the beverage products you choose.
Misleading Information
A web search of “coffee decaffeination” or
“decaffeination processes” will produce many
conflicting, confusing, uninformed/incorrect and
sometimes purposely misleading results. With so many
consumer dollars at stake, and the sordid historical
origins of chemical decaffeination (more later)
beverage producers do everything they can to reassure
consumers that their beverages are safe and healthy.
While there is a kernal of truth in most labels, decaf
products labeled “naturally decaffeinated” and “water
processed” are particularly misleading. The two
methods and four agents of decaffeination help to
explain why.
Direct vs. Indirect
Contrary to what you will read, there are both direct
and indirect methods of chemical, water, carbon and
liquefied carbon dioxide processing agents. The terms
“direct” and “indirect” do not tell the consumer
anything about whether or what kinds of solvents,
chemicals or reagents are used to decaffeinate the
product. Direct and indirect refers to whether the
chemical, water or carbon dioxide solutions come into
direct contact with the coffee beans. Indirect
processing methods steam the beans, collect and
condense the steam and then remove the caffeine from
the condensed water by either solvents or carbon-based
filtering – thus the beans themselves are not soaked
in the solution. After caffeine is separated (by any
of the above methods) from the coffee extract, the
concentrated liquid containing coffee solids and
flavors are soaked back in to the coffee beans. This
is why many people claim that decaf has less taste or
quality from unadulterated coffee.
Chemical vs. “Natural”
There are currently four types of decaffeination
processes: 1) solvent based; 2) charcoal or carbon
filtered; 3) “supercritical” carbon dioxide; and 4)
triglycerides, a process developed within the last 5
years. All of these processes are performed on green
coffee beans before they are roasted.
A point of clarification: you will read a lot about
“water-based” processes, but every single method of
decaffeination named above uses water in the process.
One should therefore not assign any weight to the term
“water processed” with one exception, which is the
Swiss Water Process that is in fact a specific,
patented carbon activated filter method.
Solvent based decaffeination is the earliest and most
controversial way to remove caffeine from coffee or
tea. Its inventor first used benzene as the separation
agent. As benzene began to be recognized as a health
hazard, it was replaced by TCE, another controversial
industrial solvent. By the 1970’s and 1980’s, TCE was
replaced by the chemical methylene chloride which has
many advantages but is still suspected of having some
carcinogenic risk. Today most processors use only
ethyl acetate as a decaffeination solvent.
It is important to note that some producers claim
ethyl acetate as “all natural” or “naturally
decaffeinated” because the chemical compound does
occur naturally in many fruits and vegetables. But the
quantity of chemical required for industrial
decaffeination means that almost 100% of the time,
synthetically manufactured ethyl acetate is used. So
far, there are no known health risks linked to the use
of ethyl acetate in direct or indirect decaffeination
methods.
Charcoal and carbon filtering processes were developed
as a direct challenge to solvent-based methods. Using
only water, coffee elements are extracted from the
beans, filtered through carbon or charcoal to remove
the caffeine, and then the extract is replaced back to
the bean. The patented Swiss Water Process is touted
as a superior method for preserving flavor, because it
throws away the first batch of beans and uses the
decaffeinated coffee extract to wash and filter the
next batch of beans, and so forth. Basically the
difference is they are not using pure water to filter
the beans, they are using “flavor charged” water that
is already saturated with flavor ingredients so only
caffeine moves from the beans to the water. Thus there
is no re-soaking or re-infusing removed flavor back
into the coffee bean, because the flavor has not been
removed.
Supercritical carbon dioxide fluid has both gas-like
and liquid-like physical properties. You many have
also heard of superheated or liquefied gas.
Supercritical fluid fills the container like a gas,
but can dissolve substances like a liquid – making it
an excellent agent for separating an element such as
caffeine from a coffee bean. The highly pressurized
carbon dioxide is forced through the beans and
penetrates deeply, dissolving up to 99% of the
caffeine. The carbon dioxide residue evaporates from
the coffee beans as they return to room temperature.
Any finally, the newest method of decaffeination uses
triglycerides from spent coffee grounds to extract
caffeine from raw coffee beans. The beans are soaked
in a hot water solution to draw the caffeine to the
surface of the beans. Then they are transferred to
another container and immersed in coffee oils that
were obtained from spent coffee grounds. The coffee
oils contain triglycerides, which when heated for
several hours at a high temperature, separate the
caffeine – but supposedly not the flavor – from the
beans.
The beans are next separated from the oils and dried.
The caffeine is removed from the oils, which are
reused to decaffeinate another batch of beans.
All of these decaffeination processes adulterate the
natural coffee bean in some way because they are
extracting elements from the essence of the bean or
tea leaf. While some methods claim to be better or
safer than others, the processes are similar, and it
can be tough for the consumer to discern which actual
method is being used. Decaf drinkers should read
product packages carefully and possibly contact the
manufacturer to ask about which method they use.
Another alternative is again, just choosing a beverage
with low caffeine content to begin with. Modify your
intake and brewing methods to preserve flavor while
lowering your caffeine exposure. One promising
development for the future is the discovery of the
enzyme that produces caffeine in the coffee plant
itself. Scientists have discovered coffee varieties in
Ethiopia containing a small fraction of the caffeine
of traditional coffee. Further they are working on
developing the enzyme into a commercial way to grow
bioengineered, caffeine-free coffee. In the mean time,
enjoy your coffee!
