Objective:
To establish an authentic African methodology of assessing coffee value — integrating scientific precision, sensory depth, and cultural intelligence.

Philosophy:

“Coffee Value is more than a score — it’s a story of soil, science, skill, and soul.”
— Kenya Coffee School (KCS)

Core Values:

  • Farmer-Centric: Focus on the grower’s impact and value share.
  • Youth & Skills Driven: Linked to KCS and Barista Mtaani training.
  • Digital & Data-Based: Uses local data (moisture, altitude, roast, processing).
  • Cultural Context: Integrates Kiswahili and African aroma expressions.
  • Sustainability-Weighted: Includes environmental and social dimensions.

ModuleFocus AreaDescriptionScoring Weight
1. Physical Analysis (PA)Green & roasted coffee physical qualityDefects, size, color, moisture, density, roast profile25%
2. Sensory Descriptive Analysis (SDA)Sensory identity profilingFlavor, aroma, acidity, sweetness, mouthfeel, aftertaste30%
3. Affective Quality Analysis (AQA)Liking / preference impressionBarista, farmer, and consumer sensory impression20%
4. Extrinsic & Traceability Analysis (ETA)Process, origin, ethics, and sustainabilityDocumentation, traceability, farmer benefit, processing ethics15%
5. Value Impact Index (VII)Economic & social value metricsPrice to farmer, impact rating, local consumption, carbon footprint10%

Total Value Score = Weighted Average of All Modules


Objective: Measure the scientific and physical attributes of coffee quality before roasting.

Parameters:

  • Moisture content (ideal: 10–12%)
  • Screen size distribution (e.g. AA, AB, PB)
  • Defects count (primary & secondary)
  • Bean color and density
  • Roast uniformity and color (Agtron scale or digital reading)

Tools:

  • Digital moisture meter
  • Digital scale
  • Color reader (Agtron or SCS Digital Roaster Sensor)
  • KCS Physical Form
ParameterResultStandardComments
Moisture %10.810–12Ideal
Screen Size18AA GradeUniform
Defects2<5Clean sample
Density1.281.25–1.30Excellent
Roast Color65 AgtronMediumBalanced roast

Objective: Objectively describe the sensory profile of a coffee sample.

  • Aroma & Flavor Attributes
  • Acidity, Sweetness, Body, Aftertaste
  • Balance & Complexity
  • Uniformity across cups

Scoring Scale:
15-point intensity scale (1–15), calibrated by Kenya Coffee School’s Sensory Lab and aligned with SCS Descriptive Toolkit.

Language Integration:
Use both English & Swahili/African Sensory Lexicon, e.g.

  • “Mbivu matunda” (ripe fruits)
  • “Mavumbi ya kahawa” (dusty coffee)
  • “Tamu tamu ya asali” (sweetness of honey)
DescriptorIntensity (1–15)Swahili Equivalent
Fruity13Matunda
Floral10Maua
Cocoa9Chokoleti
Acidity12Asidi safi
Sweetness14Utamu
Body11Mzito
Aftertaste12Ladha ya Mwisho

Objective: Capture emotional and cultural responses to coffee quality.

Respondents:

  • Trained panel (cuppers & baristas)
  • Farmers
  • Consumers (blind tasting)

Method:

  • 9-point hedonic scale (1 = dislike extremely, 9 = like extremely)
  • Weighted average from 3 panels

Sample Form Section:

Panel TypeAverage Score (1–9)Weighted %
Barista8.240%
Farmer8.530%
Consumer7.830%
Weighted AQA Score8.16/920%

Objective: Evaluate the ethical, social, and environmental value attached to the coffee.

Parameters:

  • Traceability (farm → cup)
  • Sustainability practices (water, energy use)
  • Farmer payment transparency
  • Certification or G4T compliance
  • Local processing & packaging

Scoring:
1–10 per attribute; weighted total out of 100.


Objective: Quantify how the coffee contributes to real economic and social value.

Core Metrics:

  • Farmer price per kg vs export price
  • % of value retained locally
  • Gender/youth inclusion rate
  • Local consumption factor
  • Carbon and water footprint index

Formula Example:


VII = \frac{Farmer\ Price}{Export\ Price} \times 100 + Inclusion + Sustainability

Final Coffee Value Report includes:

  1. General Information (origin, altitude, process)
  2. Physical Analysis Sheet
  3. Sensory Descriptive Sheet
  4. Affective Report
  5. Traceability Evaluation
  6. VII Computation
  7. Final KCS Coffee Value Certificate

Each sample receives a Value Class:

Score RangeClassificationMeaning
90–100Platinum SpecialtyWorld-class, unique African profile
85–89Gold SpecialtyExceptional quality, clean and distinct
80–84Silver SpecialtySpecialty grade, consistent
70–79Commercial PremiumFine but not specialty
<70Commercial StandardImprovement required

  • KCS Digital CVA App (planned) — for real-time scoring and traceability.
  • SCS Sensor Suite — integrates physics and chemistry for roast and aroma analysis.
  • Blockchain / QR Trace — for digital coffee value chain tracking.
  • AROMA LEXICON KIT — localized Swahili–English sensory training kit.

  1. Pilot in Nyeri / Kiambu — link with farmers & roasters.
  2. Train CVA Analysts — through Kenya Coffee School diploma module.
  3. Adopt for GOOD Trade Certification — CVA becomes official value protocol.
  4. Global Recognition — Position KCS CVA as the African standard alongside SCA and CQI.


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