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Kopi Luwak: Why Civet Coffee Is So Highly Valued

Kopi Luwak: Why Civet Coffee Is So Highly Valued
Carolyn Gramling 2025-10-23 15:01:00

The world’s most prized coffee ​comes from partially digested beans pooped out by the Asian palm civet. Now,researchers are delving into why this “civet coffee” is so tasty.

New chemical analyses of beans collected from​ civet poop, alongside beans picked directly from the coffee plants, suggest that fermentation in the ⁢civet’s innards does add a little something extra to⁢ the coffee’s flavor, including amping up the fat content and ⁢the concentrations of certain aromatic compounds. ⁣These alterations help create civet coffee’s unique taste profile, researchers report October 23 in Scientific Reports.

Asian palm civets (Paradoxurus hermaphroditus)‍ are ⁢catlike‍ mammals found from India to Indonesia ⁤that love fruit — including ripened coffee beans. As the beans pass through their digestive system, the civets absorb the pulp and deposit the worked-over beans ​in their⁢ dung.

Robusta coffee beans are shown still unpicked (left) and‌ after passing through a civet’s digestive system (right).Ramit Mitra

the⁣ resulting coffee is so prized that the beans may cost $600 to ⁢$1,300 ⁣a pound — a⁢ price tag ‌that has led to concerns ⁣about‌ civet captivity and animal welfare in some​ civet ‌coffee‍ farms.

Meanwhile, questions linger about whether civet coffee is truly chemically distinct. Previous studies suggested ‌that the⁤ fermenting genius behind the flavor might potentially be Gluconobacter, a bacteria genus found in civets’ feces, but not that of other animals. But what happens during that fermentation ‌is still uncertain.

Zoologist ramit Mitra, then at the Central University⁣ of kerala in India, and colleagues turned to ⁢Kodagu in southern India, ‌a coffee-producing district of Robusta beans also home to wild palm civets. The team collected 68 fecal matter samples from wild civets on estates in India growing Robusta,⁤ and also uneaten coffee beans from the same estates.

The ⁤civet-consumed beans had higher fat content ‍and also ‌higher levels of two fatty acid methyl esters: caprylic acid methyl ​ester and capric⁤ acid methyl ester. Fat,the team notes,can have a big impact on⁢ coffee’s aroma and ‍overall taste profile,and the fatty acids could also ⁢add a ‌dairylike flavor. The civet beans also had lower levels of protein and caffeine relative to uneaten beans, which could explain the coffee’s⁣ low bitterness compared⁢ with other beans.

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The findings confirm that civet coffee has a unique chemistry​ — but take these⁢ specific flavor notes with a grain of salt, the team cautions. These analyses were performed on unroasted beans; roasting can tweak to a ⁤coffee’s flavor by altering acidity and the ⁤concentrations of other chemical parameters. Moreover, the vast majority ⁢of civet coffee grounds are produced with a different bean, Arabica.

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