What is crema and how to perfect it in Turkish and Greek coffee?

You may have heard the term crema in relation to coffee making, drinking, and taste. Crema is the creamy fine froth on top of freshly brewed coffee. Some people believe Turkish, Arabic and Greek coffee doesn't give you crema and only espresso brewing does. We're correcting that myth and discovering all about crema from Zou Zou Coffee's founder and inventor, Joseph Atallah.

Joseph has a Bachelor of Science majoring in Organic Chemistry and is a food scientist, so he loves to delve into every aspect of coffee and what makes the perfect cup - including the science behind it all. There’s a lot happening when making your 'simple' cup of coffee.

What is crema?

Crema sits on the surface of the coffee liquid and is often lighter in colour due to the release of tiny carbon dioxide bubbles and the emulsified or mixed oils from the coffee beans during the brewing process. Crema has a fine, creamy and foamy texture.

On its own, the crema can taste quite bitter. When sipped as part of the overall shot, crema enhances the delicious experience by providing a fuller flavour, wonderful aroma, and longer aftertaste.

Whether it's an espresso or a Turkish, Arabic, or Greek coffee, a nice thick crema layer can indicate that your coffee is made from freshly ground beans and brewed expertly. In espresso machines, hot pressurised water passes through the ground coffee to extract the flavour and crema. With Turkish, Arabic and Greek coffee, the ground coffee is mixed and boiled with water together in hot sand or on a stovetop to unleash the flavour and crema.

Darker roasts, like the ones typically used for Turkish, Arabic and Greek coffee, will have less crema than medium roasts, but the coffee will have a more robust flavour.

Personal taste is important. Some people prefer coffee without crema.

The great news is that with your Zou Zou Coffee machine, you can use whatever flavour of coffee beans you like as long as they are finely ground. Your Zou Zou Turkish coffee machine automatically creates a velvety crema every time if you want one, or set it to manual for repeated boiling and have no crema. The choice is yours.

How to get a thick crema

Use fresh, good-quality beans and if you can, grind them just before brewing. Also, ensure your machine is clean of any old grounds from previous brewing (your Zou Zou has a self-cleaning feature).

It's important to know that the coffee bean blend, the type of roast, the age of the beans and when they were roasted, and even the water used can affect the amount of crema and its colour.

Turkish, Arabic and Greek coffee requires a fine grind, whereas a fine grind in espresso machines doesn't allow the pressurised water to pass through, leaving a weak crema, and a coarse or large grind allows too much water through and no crema.

What about the science?

Okay, over to Joseph...

Beans and Carbon Dioxide

There are two sources of carbon dioxide in the beans: the carbon dioxide formed during roasting and the carbon dioxide formed during the synthesis of the coffee beans/cherries. When the trees make the coffee cherries/beans, some carbon dioxide is trapped in the beans.

Roasting

When we place green coffee in the roaster and apply heat of around 200 degrees Celsius, many different chemical reactions occur. The organic components of the beans start to decompose, forming new compounds. Sugars within the coffee beans start to caramelise; smaller molecules burn, producing Carbon Dioxide, and carbohydrates combine with proteins - the Maillard reaction - making new volatile compounds responsible for the aroma and non-volatile compounds responsible for the flavour of coffee.

Espresso crema

Adding pressurised hot water of around 94 degrees Celsius to the compacted coffee in the espresso machine wets the coffee fragments, saturating the coffee and filling the space between fragments. The hot water replaces the carbon dioxide gas in the coffee, and carbon dioxide will bubble out of the coffee. Other components of the coffee dissolve in the water, too, giving the aroma we smell, the flavour we taste, and the proteins and oils that give us the mouthfeel of the coffee liquid and create the crema. From a total amount of 28 per cent of water-soluble components in the coffee, between 20 to 22 per cent dissolves in the espresso.

Turkish, Arabic and Greek coffee crema

When making Turkish, Arabic and Greek coffee, you start with cold water, add finely ground coffee and sugar to taste, and then heat the mixture. The water slowly wets the coffee and fills the spaces between coffee fragments.

As the mixture's temperature rises, the carbon dioxide slowly escapes as bubbles from the coffee. The water-soluble components of the coffee start to dissolve in the water, giving us the aroma and flavour. The proteins, sugar and emulsified oils leave the coffee fragments, float to the top of the coffee, and capture the carbon dioxide and air bubbles to form the crema.

As some carbon dioxide dissolves in water, it forms bicarbonate that neutralises some of the acids in the coffee, creating more carbon dioxide. As the temperature rises, more carbon dioxide escapes, and more of the coffee components, about 26 per cent, dissolve in water. When the temperature reaches 98 degrees Celsius, the crema starts to fold over. Remove the coffee from the heat, and you will have maximum crema.

Crema's composition

Crema comprises protein, sugars and emulsified oils created by the dispersion of carbon dioxide and air bubbles and helps retain coffee's flavour. Tasting crema on its own, without sipping the coffee liquid, will be bitter and astringent due to the antioxidants in coffee.

The crema's colour reveals the composition of the coffee blend. A reddish-brown colour characterises a pure Arabica blend. Robusta is characterised by its dark brown colour. The aroma profile, the chemical composition, and the brew of the two coffee blends are also very different. In Arabica, there is twice the number of lipids, which gives the mouthfeel, as Robusta, but Robusta has twice as much caffeine.

Other factors

The water used influences the character and flavour of coffee. Depending on the solutes in the water, it can also influence the volume of crema.

In Lebanon, we made coffee using water from a flowing stream. The volume and density of the crema were greater due to carbonate in the water. The stream flowed over limestone, and some of the carbonate dissolved into the water, forming bicarbonate. Bicarbonate reacts with some acids in coffee to produce more carbon dioxide as bubbles (carbonic acid produces the bubbles in champagne or soft drinks).

Now you know how much goes on, spare a thought for all those coffee components breaking apart, forming, reforming, and bubbling away, to make your cup of coffee. From its inception after spring rain, until the cherries turn red, the coffee seeds are complex actions and reactions that create the green beans for you to roast. 

If you don’t like a particular cup of coffee, please don’t blame the beans! They aim to please. Change the roast, the blend or the origin until you find coffee that satisfies you.

A photo from above showing Turkish or Greek coffee and crema in a glass

Photo by Zou Zou Coffee

The information in this article is from over 50 years of drinking and experimenting with coffee and is complemented by the articles listed below.


Come along to a Turkish coffee and fortune reading introduction class in Sydney!

Our fun, informative, and hands-on classes are designed for beginners and people who love Turkish, Arabic or Greek coffee or people who want to taste it for the first time. We'll teach you everything you need to know about Turkish, Arabic or Greek coffee: its history, the differences between this coffee and espresso, and how to make and enjoy the perfect cup! You'll also learn about the ancient art of reading fortunes in Turkish coffee cups.

*PLEASE NOTE: We do not offer a personalised fortune reading. We introduce you to the tradition of coffee cup reading and provide a guide for you to read and use to interpret your friends’ fortunes.

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The tradition of reading fortunes in coffee grounds