Glossary > Cultivation & Processing > Cherry Ripeness

Cherry Ripeness

Cultivation & Processing

In Simple Terms

Cherry ripeness is whether the coffee fruit is ready to pick. Only fully ripe cherries have the sweetness and flavour potential to make great coffee - underripe or overripe cherry compromises quality.

What is cherry ripeness in coffee?

Cherry ripeness refers to the stage of maturity of coffee fruit at the time of picking - a fundamental quality variable that directly shapes the flavour potential of the green coffee. Ripe cherries are fully developed, have achieved maximum sugar accumulation, and are ready for processing. Underripe cherries lack sweetness and contribute astringency; overripe cherries have begun to break down and can introduce fermented or rotting notes.

Visually, ripe Arabica cherries are typically a deep, uniform red or yellow (depending on the varietal), with a slight give when squeezed. Brix measurement - testing the sugar concentration of the cherry juice with a refractometer - provides an objective ripeness indicator, with well-grown specialty cherry typically reading 18-24°Brix.

Cherry ripeness is the most important single quality decision made on a farm. A perfectly managed processing method cannot compensate for underripe cherry; conversely, well-ripened cherry from a good microclimate has the flavour foundation to produce exceptional coffee regardless of processing method. Selective hand-picking - taking only fully ripe cherry in multiple passes through the same trees - is the standard for specialty production precisely because it targets this quality window. Strip picking and mechanical harvesting sacrifice ripeness selectivity for efficiency.