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Coffee Cupping Guide for Buyers: Method & Scoring
Scofi • Buyer Education

Professional Coffee Cupping Guide — Method & Scoring

Cupping is how professionals taste coffee side-by-side with discipline. It reveals flavor clarity, sweetness, defects, and consistency—turning subjective impressions into repeatable buying decisions.

This guide walks Malaysian roasters and café buyers through setup, protocol, flavor notes, and SCA-style scoring, plus practical templates and calibration tips. Sample locally with Scofi’s Malaysia stock, then approve with confidence.

Coffee cupping table: bowls, spoons, fragrance and aroma assessment
Consistent cupping turns preference into process.

Why Cupping Matters for Buyers

Roasting and brewing shape a cup, but cupping isolates the green coffee. Fixed grind, dose, and water let you assess fragrance/aroma, flavor, aftertaste, acidity, body, and balance without latte art or bar variables. Done regularly, cupping protects your menu from drift, validates supplier claims, and creates a shared language across your team.

Local Advantage With Scofi (SOO HUP SENG TRADING CO SDN BHD) coordinating inventory in Malaysia, you can request samples, cup within days, and schedule domestic delivery or pickup—no import waiting.

Comparable

Side-by-side bowls remove brew bias; you taste the coffee, not the recipe.

Actionable

Scores tie directly to buy/hold/replace decisions and blend mapping.

Calibrated

Shared vocabulary keeps baristas, roasters and finance aligned on quality.

Room, Water, and Equipment — Setting the Stage

Choose a quiet, neutral room. Avoid strong odors (cleaners, perfume, spices). Use filtered water at 92–96°C with moderate hardness and alkalinity to avoid muting acidity or exaggerating bitterness. Keep spoons, scales, grinders, and bowls clean and standardized.

ItemTarget/TipNotes
Sample roast Light-to-light-medium; even color Minimize roast “personality” to reveal bean character
Rest time 8–24 hours post roast (consistent) Standardize across all lots
Grind Medium-coarse and consistent Purge grinder between samples
Dose 8.25 g per 150 ml cup (or your house standard) Apply the same ratio to every bowl
Water 92–96°C; clean, neutral, stable Avoid extremes of hardness/alkalinity

Professional Cupping Workflow — Step-by-Step

  1. Weigh & Grind: Dose per cup; grind immediately before cupping. Evaluate fragrance (dry grounds).
  2. Pour: Fill each cup with hot water to the rim; start timers. Evaluate aroma off the bloom.
  3. Crust Break (≈4 min): With spoons, gently break the crust three times while smelling; record first flavor impressions.
  4. Clean: Skim foam and floating grounds; rinse spoons between bowls.
  5. Taste (≈8–12 min): Slurp with intent to atomize; assess flavor, acidity, body, aftertaste, balance.
  6. Cool & Re-taste: Most defects and structure issues show as the cup cools; take second/third passes.
  7. Score & Discuss: Convert observations into SCA-style scores; compare notes; align vocabulary.

Blind First

Hide origin/process to reduce bias; reveal only after scores are locked.

Three Passes

Taste hot, warm, cool. Quality holds; defects worsen as temperature drops.

Rinse Ritual

Double-rinse spoons and purge palate with water to avoid carryover.

SCA-Style Scoring — Turning Taste into Numbers

Specialty coffee scoring aggregates multiple attributes. While the official SCA form should be used for certification events, most buyers adapt a similar structure for daily work.

CategoryWhat to Look ForBuyer Notes
Aroma/Fragrance Dry & wet aromatics; intensity and quality Floral, cocoa, spice, fruit? Any bagginess?
Flavor Core notes; complexity; harmony Clean articulation vs muddiness
Aftertaste Length and pleasantness Short, astringent, or lingering sweet?
Acidity Quality (sparkling, malic, citric) & intensity Harsh/sour vs juicy/structured
Body Texture (silky, creamy, heavy) Fit for filter vs espresso goals
Balance How attributes integrate No single trait dominates
Uniformity / Clean Cup / Sweetness Bowl-to-bowl consistency; absence of taints Deduct where bowls diverge
Overall Holistic impression vs price/role Would you buy at the target price?
Defects Quakers, phenolic, ferment, mold Document severity; request replacements if needed

80+ Threshold

Lots scoring ≥80 are “specialty.” Reserve premium pricing for clean, characterful cups.

Role-Based

Scores inform fit: filter feature vs milk-focused blend vs iced signature.

Variance

Flag bowls that diverge; re-cup and check moisture/packaging history.

Defects, Triangulation & Calibration

Train your palate to catch common faults quickly. Use triangulations (A/B/X) to sharpen discrimination and team alignment.

  • Ferment/Phenolic: Over-ripe fruit, vinegar, or band-aid; often processing/drying issues.
  • Baggy/Musty: Storage humidity or age; check packaging and warehouse logs.
  • Quakers: Under-developed beans; papery, peanut-like notes.
  • Smoke/Taint: Roasting contamination or drying smoke exposure.

Team Language

Keep a house lexicon and flavor wheel posted; align descriptors weekly.

Blind Rotations

Mix known references into sessions to test objectivity and drift.

Records

Log scores, notes, moisture, packaging, and lot codes; enable traceable decisions.

Buyer Playbook — From Cupping to Contract

Tie tasting to action using a consistent checklist. Start with your menu goals, then validate that the cups match both flavor and operational needs.

  1. Define Role: Filter feature, house espresso, or blend component for milk/iced.
  2. Request Specs: Origin, elevation, variety, process, moisture (~10–12%), screen, and cup notes.
  3. Sample Roast & Rest: Keep parameters consistent; record roast curves.
  4. Cup & Score: Use shared form; blind first; retaste cool; flag variance.
  5. Cost Fit: Compare to your target COGS by beverage role; consider Arabica price trends.
  6. Decide & Schedule: Confirm packaging (jute/GrainPro/vacuum) and domestic delivery/pickup with Scofi.
  7. Arrival QC: Re-check moisture and cup to confirm match with pre-shipment sample.

Blend Mapping

Document % contributions and sensory intent; keep retention samples for each lot.

Menu Education

Translate cupping notes into guest-friendly language on boards and cards.

Replacement Plan

Map backup lots in advance; prevent outages and flavor shocks.

Explore Related Guides

Build a complete evaluation pipeline, from sample to service:

SCAA Grading

Understand 80+ and attribute scoring.

Quality Control

Arrival checks that protect flavor.

Processing Methods

Washed, natural, honey, experimental notes.

Arabica Varieties

Typica, Bourbon, Geisha & more.

Scofi Malaysia Supplier

Local stock, faster sampling cycles.

How To Buy

Step-by-step buyer checklist.

Storage Tips

Preserve sweetness and clarity.

Post-Harvest Storage

Moisture control & packaging choice.

FAQ — Coffee Cupping for Buyers

What’s the difference between fragrance and aroma?
Fragrance is the smell of dry grounds; aroma is assessed after hot water is added. Both set expectations for flavor and cleanliness.
How soon after roasting should I cup?
Keep it consistent. Many buyers cup at 8–24 hours post roast for sample roasts to reveal bean character without heavy roast influence.
Why does cupping require multiple passes?
Taste changes as the cup cools; structure and defects are clearer warm to cool. Three passes improve accuracy.
Is SCA-style scoring mandatory?
Not mandatory, but widely used. Adopting the structure improves calibration and comparability even outside certification contexts.
How many bowls per sample?
Three to five bowls per lot are common for uniformity checks and to detect outliers like quakers or contamination.
What water should I use?
Neutral-tasting water in the 92–96°C range with moderate hardness/alkalinity. Extreme mineral profiles can mask or distort acidity/body.
How do I record results for my team?
Use a consistent form with numeric scores and descriptors; store alongside lot codes, moisture, and packaging notes for traceability.
Should I cup blind?
Yes—start blind to reduce bias. Reveal identities only after scores are captured, then discuss alignment and purchasing implications.
How do I train new cuppers?
Run short weekly sessions with reference cups (e.g., citric, malic, phenolic examples). Use triangulations to build discrimination skills.
Can Scofi provide samples in Malaysia?
Yes. We coordinate local stock so you can cup quickly, approve lots, and receive domestic deliveries or arrange pickup.

Cup, Score, Decide — With Local Samples

Tell us your flavor targets and beverage mix. We’ll prepare Malaysia-local samples, share specs and baseline notes, and coordinate domestic delivery or pickup once you approve.