Coffee Bean Shop provides delicious decaffeinated decaf coffee beans at at fantastic prices. Your Decaf Coffee Beans are decaffeinated by the all natural Swiss Water Process. Your Decaf coffee beans are full bodied Colombian Decaf coffee beans, Rainforest Alliance certified organic coffee. If you have been searching for a delicious decaf coffee bean, you have found it. Delicious full flavour Colombian bean producing luxurious cappuccino, flat white or latte.
Espresso shots have never tasted so good.
Espresso shots have never tasted so good.
Decaffeination is the act of removing caffeine from coffee beans. (While caffeine-free soft drinks are occasionally referred to as "decaffeinated", some are better termed "uncaffeinated": prepared without adding caffeine during production.) Despite removal of caffeine, many decaffeinated drinks still have around 1-2% of the original caffeine remaining in them.
In the case of coffee, various methods can be used to produce a decaf coffee bean. The process is usually performed on unroasted (green) coffee beans, and starts with steaming of the beans.
When a chemical process is used (Coffee Bean Shop does not use a chemical process), they are then rinsed with a solvent that extracts the caffeine while leaving the other essential chemicals in the coffee beans. The process is repeated anywhere from 8 to 12 times until it meets either the international standard of having removed 97% of the caffeine in the beans or the EU standard of having the beans 99.9% caffeine-free by mass. Coffee contains over 400 chemicals important to the taste and aroma of the final drink: It is, therefore, challenging to remove only caffeine while leaving the other chemicals at their original concentrations.
In the case of coffee, various methods can be used to produce a decaf coffee bean. The process is usually performed on unroasted (green) coffee beans, and starts with steaming of the beans.
When a chemical process is used (Coffee Bean Shop does not use a chemical process), they are then rinsed with a solvent that extracts the caffeine while leaving the other essential chemicals in the coffee beans. The process is repeated anywhere from 8 to 12 times until it meets either the international standard of having removed 97% of the caffeine in the beans or the EU standard of having the beans 99.9% caffeine-free by mass. Coffee contains over 400 chemicals important to the taste and aroma of the final drink: It is, therefore, challenging to remove only caffeine while leaving the other chemicals at their original concentrations.