Storing Green Coffee Beans in the Freezer?

I roast my own coffee and about a year ago I read an article about freezing green coffee beans to keep them fresher than they would be if just stored normally in a cool clean place.

I have now done the experiment and first results are promising. Beans stored in a sealed vacuum pack bag in the freezer had more berry and chocolate notes as well as being slightly sweeter after roasting than those stored normally. The beans stored normally had a flatter, less interesting flavor profile.

Both sets of beans had rested unmolested in their respective storage areas at home for about 10.5 months. When the bags were opened, the aroma of the green beans was unmistakably different with the beans that had been frozen giving off a fresh vegetation grassy smell consistent with a new arrival of beans. The beans stored at room temperature were unremarkable with a sort of neutral smell.

Detailed Discussion

El Salvador Finca Limus Bella Vista Natural beans were purchased from Burman Coffee Traders in mid-August, 2021. Two pounds were stored in the bag they came in downstairs in a cool spot. The bag has a couple small holes which allow some small air exchange. One pound, retaining the plastic bag it was shipped in, was put in a vacuum seal bag and stored in a freezer. Unfortunately, the vacuum sealed bag seems to have gotten a small hole along the way so the vacuum was not retained. Double-bagging probably helped keep the beans from attaining unwanted flavors though. No frost was apparent in the bag.

The frozen beans were taken out of the freezer in mid-July, 2022 and thawed for two days followed by roasting to a full city to dark level (17% weight loss). As stated earlier, the aroma from the beans that was frozen was superior to the bag stored normally. The roast was slightly different. The beans that had been frozen started the first crack very slightly later and ended earlier than the beans from normal storage. There was a little more popcorn and other sweet aromatics in the smoke. And they entered second crack earlier. It is possible that these timings were do to having been the second batch but if so, I don’t think it was wholly do to this. The roaster was a Gene Cafe and it had an 11 minute warmup before putting the first batch in (normally stored beans). The 2nd batch (frozen beans) were put on without cool down after the first batch was poured out. Both batches went into a cooler that gets beans to ambient temperate in 2.5 to 3 minutes.

The roasted coffee was made with a pourover using 2 Hario filter holders and filters on 2 cups at the same time with water that came out of an electric water kettle set to 200F. Coffee was ground by hand in an attempt to minimize cross-contamination of different coffee. Coffee was weighed pre and post grind to make sure the amount matched.

Description from the vendor: A wonderful very fruit forward El Salvador coffee. Light roasts are full of lemony red fruit tones, on the sweet side, slightly floral, balanced with a dry nutty/chocolaty undertone. A bit front loaded, the lighter tones dominate the cup with just hints of the dry nutty lingering in the aftertaste. Medium roasts develop the darker tones nicely turning it much more chocolaty with strong red fruit accents. Not quite as lemony and would still be considered a very fruit forward cup. Many will like the medium roast best for its sweet and smooth while maintaining those lovely exotic natural processed tones. Darker roasts drop out most of the acidity but still retain a bit of fruity factor balanced though with a strong and semi-sweet smoky bakers chocolate note.

Since this was a darker roast, the description for a darker roast was a better match for the cup. The following table compares how the taste matched the description for each storage type:

Taste AttributeFrozen BeansStandard Storage
red fruit tonescame throughhard to detect
on the sweet sidenice smooth sweetnesssimilar but slightly less so
semi-sweet smoky bakers chocolate notecame throughhard to detect

Further Study

This experiment compared green coffee beans stored at room temperature in a typical bag as it came from the vendor vs coffee stored in the freezer. I have other coffee that was simply vacuum packed and stored at room temperature. This will be compared at a future date.

Conclusion

Despite losing some unknown benefit of vacuum packing the coffee beans stored in the freezer, they seem to be superior to the ones stored normally.

At the time of green bean purchase, there were rumors that coffee prices were going to climb significantly so I bought ahead. This increased my interest in the best way to store coffee for longer periods. If you know that you want to store some green beans for a longer duration, freezing them in a good, airtight container appears to be superior to leaving them at room temperature.

One byproduct of this experiment is that it seems to indicate that the best quality beans are fresher. In other words, it is probably generally better to roast more recently harvested beans than to roast “old” beans. I feel that I got a glimpse at the change in taste between fresh beans and ones that are 1.25 years plus from harvest and drying with this freezing experiment.

So we might say that fresh is best but if you are going to store green beans then vacuum packing them and freezing them is a good alternative.



Visiting Crows 05/26/22

I came back from a nice hike of Skyline to new excitement. A crow was “cornered” by one of our cats (Rusty). I shooed Rusty away to the other side of the yard and the crow followed! The crow seemed t be edging closer and closer to Rusty until I yelled at Rusty and he ran in the other direction. Then the tables turned and the crow moved to our wood pile and hid with Rusty circling.

Several crows were squawking overhead this whole time and flying back and forth. We were concerned that Rusty had injured the crow but I am not convinced.

Things eventually settled down on Thursday and by later afternoon the “cornered crow” had migrated to by the fence at the back of our yard. I went up there and took pictures to the consternation of the two “over-watch crows” who kept an eye on the situation and were very noisy. I was careful to keep my distance. The pictures below are from that.

Kyle found a reference that said juvenile crows may end up on the ground before they can fly. Adults will keep an eye on it and even bring food. This seemed to match the situation. We ended up dog-sitting Ziggy, Hilary’s dog and when she or one of our cats first went outside or showed up in the vicinity of the juvenile crow then the two over-watch crows would squawk like crazy. The other crows seemed to move on but these watchers stuck around.

It is now Sunday, 3 days later, and I can’t find the juvenile crow in the back yard. The over-watch crows squawked at Rusty out front this morning but there is no sign of the juvenile. I hope it has figured out how to fly and is enjoying a new freedom.

Sanborn Skyline Trail 5/26/22

https://www.alltrails.com/explore/map/sanborn-skyline-fb4c486?u=i

About  7 mile hike on a trail that is close to Skyline road. (Trail map mistakenly shows hike on road but really on Skyline trail shown next to it). We hiked out to Indian Rock and back in nicely cool weather with wind rustling through the tree branches high above us.

The trail is great for hiking with interesting places that one can stop and linger (see benches and picnic bench). It was a nice surprise to come around a corner in this forest environment and see the valley framed below. There were a couple places where trees dealt with the hand they were sown, one having a branch incorporated in a tree next to it and another wrapped around/into a rock.

There are places people do rock climbing with ropes including Indian rock where we saw a group enjoying the challenge presented. One of the pictures is of a cave, just big enough for a sleeping bag on Indian Rock.

A good-sized alligator lizard checked up out from the side of the trail. And I like to think that the sun-bleached $20 bill stuck in a fence post by a trail head is an indication of the type of people who visit this beautiful environment.

The only downside was finding a tick on my neck after the hike. Not entirely sure it came from there since the trails were pretty wide. This should not deter people looking for a wonderful hike though.

Almaden Quicksilver Hike on Friday the 13th – May 13, 2022

https://www.alltrails.com/explore/recording/quick-5-with-25-minutes-of-running-454cecc

Nice 5 mile hike to enjoy the quiet of the outdoors. Surprised by bird calls that didn’t sound like birds. Part of the hike faces Santa Clara valley and the juxtaposition of the San Jose city skyline with the open space enhanced the wonder of this resource.

We saw a beautiful Woodpecker, Turkey Vultures, Hawks, a Humming Bird, and Seagulls. Many seagulls at the reservoir on the backside of mountain we hiked around. It appeared that the Seagulls flew down the valley and then back to the reservoir where they flocked in the water. Seagulls often come inland if a storm is coming but it was a nice day and the nice weather was expected to continue for a while.

Near the end of the hike we came across remnants of structures used for processing mercury. It was a nice spring hike that would be extremely hot in the summer time. Pictures below share the experience including two 360 pictures where you can look around by clicking on the image and moving your mouse (clicking on VR puts it in full screen mode).

Easter Lunch with Family

Pam was visiting for a show and we got together with her and family. Unfortunately, Griffin had a class in LA and couldn’t join us but we got to celebrate their 1st wedding anniversary with Pam in person and Griffin on video via Pam’s phone.

Joseph D Grant hike on Feb 24, 2022

https://www.alltrails.com/explore/recording/2017-06-04-grant

Light snow sprinkled the area earlier in the week and it was cold. We even came across a couple patches in the shade on our hike!

We saw wild boars rooting in a field as well as one by the parking lot. The amount of damage they did was amazing; it looked like a rototiller came by.

Blessing for a Wedding

Griffin and Pam got a blessing from a Buddhist monk at Buddhanusorn Thai Temple this weekend in preparation for their wedding this week. We joined the happy couple, Pam’s mom, Pam’s sister and her family. It was a beautiful day with words of wisdom for a happy marriage!