Glossary > Cultivation & Processing > Parchment

Parchment

Cultivation & Processing

In Simple Terms

Parchment is the paper-like shell around the coffee bean after the fruit skin has been removed. Washed coffees dry inside their parchment, which protects the bean. The parchment is only stripped off at the dry mill right before the coffee is sorted and bagged for export.

What is parchment in coffee processing?

Parchment is the thin but tough papery layer that surrounds the green coffee bean beneath the mucilage. It's part of the coffee cherry's seed structure - technically the endocarp - and protects the bean during fermentation, washing, and drying after pulping.

Washed and honey processed coffees are dried with their parchment intact - referred to as parchment coffee or café en pergamino. The parchment is only removed at the dry mill during hulling, just before grading, sorting, and export.

For producers, parchment coffee is the form in which washed lots are stored between processing and dry milling. Keeping coffee in parchment for a defined resting period (reposo) is associated with improved cup quality and longer storage life - the parchment provides a protective barrier that helps stabilise the bean's moisture and chemistry before the lot is prepared for market.