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Pyrazines

Roasting

In Simple Terms

Pyrazines are the compounds that create coffee's characteristic roasted, nutty smell. They form during roasting through the Maillard reaction and are more pronounced in darker roasts.

What are pyrazines in coffee?

Pyrazines are a family of nitrogen-containing aromatic compounds produced primarily through the Maillard reaction and Strecker degradation during coffee roasting. They are among the most characteristic volatile compounds in roasted coffee, responsible for the nutty, roasted, earthy, and cereal-like aroma notes associated with coffee's distinctive smell.

Pyrazines are produced when sugars and amino acids react under heat - part of the complex cascade of reactions that transform green coffee into its roasted form. Different pyrazine structures produce different specific aromas: methylpyrazine contributes a nutty, roasted quality; 2,3-dimethylpyrazine is associated with cocoa and chocolate; 2,5-dimethylpyrazine with hazelnut; trimethylpyrazine with a more roasted, earthy character.

The concentration of pyrazines in roasted coffee increases with roast degree - darker roasts typically show more pyrazine-dominated aroma character, which is part of why dark roasts smell intensely roasted and nutty where light roasts are more floral and fruity. Pyrazines are also responsible for much of the "fresh roast" smell that emerges from a roaster or a freshly opened bag of coffee. Because they are relatively stable volatile compounds, they persist longer in brewed coffee than some of the more delicate floral aromatics that characterise light roast profiles.