![]() Photo courtesy CoffeeResearch.org After floating in fermentation tanks for awhile, the beans are dried either in the sun or mechanically. |
![]() Photo courtesy CoffeeResearch.org Shuffling coffee beans around on drying tables in the sun |
![]() Photo courtesy CoffeeResearch.org Raking coffee beans on a drying patio in the sun |
Once the beans are dried, all of the layers are removed from the beans (this process is called hulling). Occasionally, beans may be polished in a machine designed to remove that last little bit of silver skin. Beans are then graded and sorted, first by size, then by density. Beans are either sorted by hand as they pass by on a conveyer belt or by an air jet that separates lighter (inferior) beans from heavier ones.
Coffee is shipped unroasted. This is called green coffee. It is stored in bags made of jute or sisal, or shipped in huge plastic-lined freight containers. About 7-million tons of green coffee are shipped worldwide each year.
More Options: