HETEROCYCLIC COMPOUNDS IN MEDIUM ROASTED COFFEE HARVESTED FROM VARIOUS GEOGRAPHIC REGIONS
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.55251/jmbfs.11727Keywords:
coffea arabica, heterocyclic compounds, volatiles, origin, safety, GC-MSAbstract
The research is focused on GC-MS identification of heterocyclic compounds (HCCs) in commercially most accepted medium roasted specialty coffee beans from renowned harvesting sites from Africa and America and their precursors in green beans. Obtained GC-MS data showed the most abundant HCCs group in medium roasted coffee was furan derivates and pyrazine derivates, reaching an average of 24.17% in African samples, 22.27% in American samples, and 13.41% and 17.62%, respectively. Pyridine derivates reached similar concentrations, 5.02% in African and 5.27% in American samples. The least abundant group was pyrrole derivates, reaching only 2.79% in African and 1.91% in American samples. Pearson’s correlation proved weak positive correlations between all HCCs (furan derivates, pyrrole derivates, pyrazines derivates, and pyridine derivates) and volatiles hydrocarbons measured in green samples. Further correlation analysis proved the positive correlation between aldehydes, furanes, and pyrazines. However, Pearson’s correlation coefficient proved a weak correlation (0.273 – 0.455). ANOVA pointed out that after the roasting, only pyrazine derivates showed geographical dependence, suggesting there might be other precursors that need to be studied to better understand safety and quality issues from the perspective of origin and roasting of the commodity.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2025 Alzbeta Demianova, Alica Bobkova, Lukas Jurcaga, Olga Grygorieva, Marek Bobko, Terezia Svecova, Simona Kunova, Ivana Timoracka, Andrea Mesárošová, Melina Korcok, Dominika Jurášková

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
All papers published in the Journal of Microbiology, Biotechnology and Food Sciences are published under a CC-BY licence (CC-BY 4.0). Published materials can be shared (copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format) and adapted (remix, transform, and build upon the material for any purpose, even commercially) with specifying the author(s).