Glossary > Cultivation & Processing > Flat Bean
Flat Bean
Cultivation & Processing
What is a flat bean in coffee?
A flat bean is a standard coffee bean - the term exists specifically to distinguish it from a peaberry. Most coffee cherries contain two seeds that develop pressed against each other, giving each a characteristically flat inner face. Those are flat beans.
The term comes up most often on East African green coffee specifications, where the grade designation includes physical form. A Kenyan AA flat tells you the lot has been sorted to remove peaberries, leaving only the standard flat beans of AA screen size.
The practical relevance for roasting: flat beans and peaberries behave somewhat differently in the drum - peaberries' rounded shape means they tumble more freely and can develop at a slightly different rate. Whether separated peaberries produce a meaningfully better cup is debated, but the distinction is real enough that it appears on specifications and is worth understanding when it does.
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