There's an experience almost all coffee lovers share: they take a sip, feel that something is different, special — and they don't know how to describe it. It's not a lack of sensitivity. It's a lack of vocabulary.
The coffee flavor wheel exists precisely for this: to give you the language to name what you are already feeling. And once you use it, coffee will never be the same again.
What is the coffee flavor wheel?
The SCA Coffee Taster's Flavor Wheel is a tool developed by the Specialty Coffee Association together with World Coffee Research to standardize coffee tasting vocabulary globally.
It was created based on scientific sensory analyses: researchers identified the aromatic and flavor compounds present in coffee and organized them into categories ranging from general to specific.
The wheel is read from the inside out:
- Center: broad categories — fruity, floral, vegetal, roasted, spicy, sweet, sour, bitter
- Middle ring: more specific subcategories — citrus fruits, red fruits, chocolate, nuts
- Outer ring: specific flavors — lemon, raspberry, hazelnut, cocoa, panela
It's not necessary to identify everything — the goal is to refine perception from the general to the particular.
How to use it at home: practical guide
You don't need to be a certified taster to benefit from the wheel. You just need attention, a specialty coffee with a defined profile, and to follow these steps:
Step 1 — Brew the coffee correctly
Poorly brewed coffee does not reflect its true profile. Use water at 92–96°C (never boiling), the correct ratio (1 gram of coffee for every 15–16 ml of water), and grind just before brewing. If the coffee is stale or poorly stored, the results will not be reliable.
Step 2 — Smell before tasting
80% of what we perceive as flavor comes from smell. Bring the cup close, close your eyes, and inhale. Don't look at the wheel yet. What do you notice first? Something sweet, roasted, floral, fruity? Write down your first impression without filtering it.
Step 3 — The first sip, without evaluating
Take a sip and let it move all over your mouth. Palate, tongue, back of the mouth. Note the body (is it light like water or heavy like milk?), the acidity (does it make you salivate?), the sweetness (do you taste anything sweet without sugar?) and the finish (what remains after swallowing?).
Step 4 — Now open the wheel
With your fresh perceptions, locate yourself at the center of the wheel. First identify the broadest category that corresponds to what you felt. Then move outward to specify. It's okay if you reach the middle ring and stay there — you're already training your palate.
Step 5 — Take a second comparative sip
With the wheel in hand, take another sip, seeking to confirm or refine what you noted. The second perception is usually more accurate than the first.
Practical exercise: Honey vs Natural from Green Hills
The best exercise to train your palate with the wheel is to compare two coffees from the same origin with different processes. The results are surprising — and the difference is evident even for those who have never done a tasting.
With Honey Coffee
Prepare the Honey Coffee and follow the steps. At the center of the wheel, first look for "sweet" or "fruity." As you move outward, you'll find references to yellow fruits: peach, apricot, mango. In the outer ring, terms like caramel, panela, or sugarcane honey may appear. The body is silky — neither too light nor too heavy.
With Natural Coffee
Repeat the exercise with the Natural Coffee. This time the center of the wheel points to "fruity" but in the direction of red fruits: raspberry, plum, cherry. Something wine-like might appear. The body is heavier, the finish longer. The difference with the Honey is immediate — same farm, same roast level, different process.
This exercise demonstrates something that no text can explain so well: that the processing method is not a technical detail — it's the difference between two completely distinct experiences.
What if I don't identify anything on the wheel?
It happens. And it's completely normal. The palate is trained — it's not an innate skill. Professional tasters spend years practicing before accurately identifying specific notes.
What you can do from the very first time is record general perceptions: sweet or bitter? Light or heavy? Acidic or neutral? With each cup, these perceptions become more refined until one day you identify raspberry in a Natural and can't believe you didn't notice it before.
The best starting point for training your palate is to have two coffees with distinct profiles ready for comparison. Our Chiva Colombiana Kit includes a selection of our specialty coffees — the perfect complement to get started.







