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2022 WCRC Rules and Regulations - 2021-12-06
2022 WCRC Rules and Regulations - 2021-12-06
2022 WCRC Rules and Regulations - 2021-12-06
Regulations
1. Conditions of Participation ...................................................................................................................... 4
1.1. Organization ........................................................................................................................................ 4
1.2. Rights .................................................................................................................................................. 4
1.3. Conditions of Participation .................................................................................................................. 4
1.4. Conflicts of Interest ............................................................................................................................. 6
1.5. Enforcement of Rules and Regulations .............................................................................................. 7
1.6. Application .......................................................................................................................................... 7
2. The Competition........................................................................................................................................ 8
2.1. Competition Summary ........................................................................................................................ 8
2.2. Standards and Definitions ................................................................................................................... 8
3. Competition Procedure .......................................................................................................................... 10
3.1. Roasting Stage Area ......................................................................................................................... 10
4. Machinery, Accessories, and Raw Materials........................................................................................ 11
4.1. Sample Roasting Machine ................................................................................................................ 11
4.2. Production Roasting Machine ........................................................................................................... 11
4.3. Provided Equipment and Supplies .................................................................................................... 11
4.4. Optional Equipment & Supplies ........................................................................................................ 11
5. Competitor Instructions Prior to Competition ..................................................................................... 12
5.1. Competitor Orientation Meeting ........................................................................................................ 12
5.2. Coaches ............................................................................................................................................ 12
5.3. Emcees ............................................................................................................................................. 12
5.4. Interpreters ........................................................................................................................................ 12
5.5. Be on Time ........................................................................................................................................ 13
5.6. Clean and Organized Area ............................................................................................................... 13
6. Pre-Roasting............................................................................................................................................ 13
6.1. Lab Practice and Green Evaluation .................................................................................................. 13
6.2. Sample Roasting ............................................................................................................................... 13
6.3. Open Cupping ................................................................................................................................... 14
6.4. Practice Roasting .............................................................................................................................. 14
6.5. Roast Plan ........................................................................................................................................ 14
7. Production Roasting............................................................................................................................... 15
7.1. Roasting Time ................................................................................................................................... 15
8. Roast Plan Scoresheet Evaluation ........................................................................................................ 17
8.1. Weight Evaluation Scale ................................................................................................................... 17
8.2. Temperature Evaluation Scale .......................................................................................................... 17
8.3. Color Evaluation Scale ...................................................................................................................... 18
1.1. Organization
The World Coffee Roasting Championship (WCRC) is a program of World Coffee Events, LTD (WCE).
1.2. Rights
All intellectual property related to the World Coffee Roasting Championship, including these Official
Rules and Regulations and the format of the competition, are the property of World Coffee Events,
LTD. No part of this document may be used or reproduced without the expressed permission of World
Coffee Events, LTD.
The World Coffee Roasting Championship (WCRC) is a competition open to qualified Competition
Body Champions of a World Coffee Events (WCE) sanctioned competition event. Sanctioned events
are put on by WCE Licensed Competition Bodies. Every competition year, 1 competitor from each
WCE Licensed Competition Body may participate. (To learn more about how to become a WCE
Licensed Competition Body please read the Competition Body Sanctioning Criteria and Terms, found
here: worldcoffeeevents.org/competition-bodies
A. A Competition Body Champion is defined as the competitor who wins their Competition Body
Championship. This competitor has won the right to compete in that year’s World
Championship, or to defer candidacy to the following year. A competitor may defer candidacy
to the following year, only if they have an eligible reason for doing so (see Deferred Candidacy
(DC) Policy on the WCE website: https://worldcoffeeevents.org/deferred-candidacy-
application-general-contact-submission/).
B. If a Competition Body Champion successfully applies for Deferred Candidacy, they retain their
title as Competition Body Champion, and may compete in the World Championships the
following year. Once the Competition Body Champion has deferred their candidacy, the
licensed Competition Body may designate an alternate competitor from its competition in
descending order of succession, beginning with its second-place finisher. In this case, the
competitor who goes to the World Championships will hold the title of Competition Body
Competitor. Competition Body Competitors are not eligible for Deferred Candidacy, and do
not hold the title of Competition Body Champion. However, all Competition Body Competitors
C. If a Competition Body Champion is not eligible for deferral, and elects not to go to the World
Championships, the title of Competition Body Champion will transfer to the successive
competitor.
D. All Competition Body Champions who do not compete in the worlds, for any reason, are
required to give WCE notice themselves, via [email protected] to ensure clarity.
Requests for any substitutions (Competition Body Representative Competitor) must be also
received in writing from the Competition Body at [email protected] and approved
by its Managing Director prior to competition.
Competitors must be at least 18 years of age at the time of competing in any World Coffee Events
(WCE) sanctioned event.
1.3.4. Nationality
A. Competitors must hold a valid passport from the place they represent or documentation
substantiating 24 months of residency, employment or scholastic enrolment, some portion of
which must have been within 12 months preceding the qualifying Competition Body
competition.
B. Competitors may only participate for one sanctioned Competition Body per WCE Competition
year. A competition year is relative to the World Championships for which an event is qualifying
a competitor to compete. (e.g., if the competitor is competing in any CB event that would
qualify them for a 2020 World Championship, they must compete for that CB exclusively in
any event that is a qualifier for any 2020 World Coffee Championship).
In case of multiple passports, the contestant must choose 1 Competition Body and qualify through
the respective sanctioned Competition Body championship.
1.3.6. Expenses
Licensed Competition Bodies are required to pay their Champion’s reasonable travel and
accommodations expenses to, from, and for the duration of the WCRC. All other expenses not
explicitly listed above are the sole responsibility of the competitor. WCE will not be liable for any
competitor expenses under any circumstance.
1.4.1. Judging
A. Competitors may not judge in any sanctioned WCRC competition (world, Competition Body,
regional) in any country, including their own, prior to the conclusion of that year’s WCRC
Event. Judges may not compete in any sanctioned WCRC competition (world, Competition
Body, or regional) in any country, including their own, prior to the conclusion of that year’s
WCRC Event.
B. WCRC judges must not coach and judge in the same competition, for that competition year.
C. Competitors may not select or endorse judges within their Competition Body Competition.
Competitors who are involved in the management of their Competition Body Competition
should declare their position via email to WCE outlining their areas of involvement. Note that
this does not necessarily exclude or effect the competitor’s engagement, however non-
disclosure most likely will.
A. Competitors who participate as a calibration barista in a judge calibration for this competition
are not eligible to compete in a sanctioned event until the completion of the competition year.
This applies to both Competition Body WCE Sanctioned events as well as the World
Competition.
B. A competitor is allowed to be a calibration barista if they are not competing in that same
competition year, for that championship. Additionally, a competitor is allowed to be a
calibration barista at the World Championships in the same competition year, if they have
failed to qualify for the World Championships at their sanctioned championships.
C. A competition year is relative to the World Championships for which a Competition Body event
is qualifying a competitor to compete.
Correct example: A competitor acts as a calibration barista for the 2021 World Championships. They
are allowed to compete in their Competition Body events, that would qualify them to compete in the
2022 World Championships.
Incorrect example: A competitor acts as a calibration barista for any 2021 sanctioned Competition
Body championship event (even in a country that is not their own), and then competes in the same
competition at the 2021 World Championships.
WCE encourages any potential conflicts of interest to be declared at the soonest opportunity, certainly
prior to the commencement of any competition by competitor, judge and/or event organizer.
Failure to declare a potential conflict in advance of a sanctioned event could result in disqualification
from events for an individual, or WCE removing endorsement for an event and its results that do not
follow these guidelines. Questions regarding conflicts of interest, or clarification of the above policy
should be directed to [email protected].
The WCRC will employ these Rules & Regulations throughout the competition. If a competitor violates
one or more of these Rules & Regulations, they may be automatically disqualified from the
competition, except when the Rules designate a specific enforcement or consequence. If a judge or
competition organizer causes the violation of one or more of these Rules, a competitor may submit
an appeal, according to the process detailed in the “World Coffee Roasting Championship Appeals”
or “Competition Body Event Appeals” sections.
All Rules and Regulations are subject to change based on local and venue health and safety
requirements or guidelines. World Coffee Events will share any Rules and Regulations changes via
email ahead of the competition. These changes may include, but are not limited to changes to table
sizes or layouts; material of provided vessels or cups; limits on coaches or helpers in the competitor
preparation and practice rooms; mask or glove mandates; schedule changes for sanitization; etc.
1.6. Application
Competition Body Champions from competitions conducted less than 6 weeks prior to the WCRC
Event must submit all registration materials no more than 5 days after their Competition Body event.
Failure to meet these criteria may result in denial of participation.
All competitors are personally responsible for reading and understanding current WCRC Rules &
Regulations and scoresheets, without exception. All WCRC documents are available at
worldcoffeeroasting.org. Competitors are encouraged to ask questions prior to arriving at the WCRC.
If any competitor is unclear as to the intent of any of the rules and regulations it is their responsibility
to clarify that position with the Rules and Regulations Committee prior to the WCRC by contacting
[email protected]. Competitors will also have the opportunity to ask questions during the
official Competitors Meeting held prior to the start of the competition.
Competitors and the World Coffee Roasting Champion are visible spokespeople of the World Coffee
Roasting Championship event and role models of the specialty coffee industry, and as such must:
A. Permit World Coffee Events Ltd., its stakeholders, agents and representatives to use the
competitor’s name, image or likeness in any format without charge for any business purpose,
including but not limited to marketing promotion.
B. Read and abide by the Competitor Code of Conduct document found on the WCRC website.
C. Read and abide by the Champion Code of Conduct document found on the WCRC website.
2. The Competition
A. Pre-Roasting – lab practice, green evaluation, sample roasting, open cupping, and roast plan.
B. Production Roasting
A. All green coffee in the competition will be of the species Coffea Arabica, produced in various
countries or regions. Competitors will be provided with total of 5 different types of green coffee
designated for each roast category: one competition coffee to be used specifically for Single
Origin coffee roast, three competition coffees to be used for Blend coffee roast, and one
B. Green Coffees may have been processed by any of the different processing methods (e.g.,
washed [wet-process], natural [dry-process], semi-washed, etc.)
350-500 grams of green coffee, one from each available option, will be provided to competitors for
their green bean evaluation and sample roasting. The green coffee samples provided will be randomly
pulled from the bulk quantity of each green coffee option. Competitors may green grade any of the
samples provided for their own reference.
B. Single Origin coffee should be roasted using only the provided Single Origin green coffee,
and Blend coffee should be produced using the provided green coffee options.
C. Each green coffee option provided for the Blend coffee must be used a minimum of 10%
of the total weight of the Blend coffee submission and the production must correspond with
the Roast Plan.
D. Non-compliance with these requirements will result in a score of 0 being given in all
categories on the Production Roast Evaluation scoresheet for that coffee.
Roasted and ground coffee will be evaluated for roast color using the provided colorimeter.
Instructions and the grind size for the roast color evaluation will be given during the competitor tutorial
time. Competitors may bring their own roasted coffee sample to be calibrated with the provided
colorimeter. If the sponsored colorimeter has multiple reading settings, the setting to be used will be
agreed upon and communicated in the orientation meeting.
The roasted coffee product will be submitted by the competitor as their final product to be evaluated
by judges. The submission should be completed by competitors before their production roasting time
is finished. The roasted coffee submission should be a total of 2 products: one Single Origin and one
Competitors will submit a Roast Plan for each production roast. Competitors should clearly describe
the weight, temperature, color reading of their roasted coffee, and provide a description of what the
taste and flavor results of the production roast will be, including the intensity of acidity and body.
Competitors are recommended to use the SCA standard flavor wheels as a reference tool.
3. Competition Procedure
A. During competition time, non-competitors should not give assistance or input to competitors,
or interfere in any way with the competitor, judges, stage manager or the competition
procedure. Failure to comply with this may lead to disqualification of the competitor.
B. Officials will warm up roasting machines for a period of 30 minutes before the first competitor
is to begin roasting. The roasting machine warm-up temperature will be announced at the
competitor orientation meeting. The machines will be returned to the same warm-up
temperature before the next competitor competes. Competitors may be given 5 minutes of
preparation time to adjust their own warm-up temperature before their sample roasting time
begins.
C. All green coffee will be given to competitors by the stage manager or technical officials right
before each activity starts.
D. No coffee may leave the venue from the beginning of the competition until the competition
ends. All coffees for the competition will be collected by officials immediately after each activity
(e.g., sample roasting, practice roasting, production roasting, etc.). Competitors are allowed
to take some of their sample roast or practice roast coffees to the open cupping area.
E. Competitors will be allowed to collect their roasted coffee after the awards ceremony.
F. The roasted sample, practice, and production coffee may be brewed at the WCRC bar to serve
the audience during the event with non-disclosure of competitor information. Audiences may
have an opportunity to blind vote their favorite production coffee at the WCRC bar. The
A coffee roasting machine designed for roasting 100-500g samples will be provided.
The roasting machines provided will be manually operable, between the advertised 3-6kg capacity
and will be installed according to local laws for safety and environmental effects. No use of automation
mode will be allowed during the competition.
WCE will make every effort to ensure that competitors can use the same roasting machine for both
practice and production, but this will not be guaranteed.
A. Lab Station:
i. Lab Tool Table (e.g., moisture measuring device, density measuring device, sizing
screens, etc.)
ii. Green Evaluation Workstation (e.g., green grading table, mat, trays, etc.)
D. Cupping Station (e.g., grinder, water source, cupping supplies, scales, colorimeter etc.)
Competitors may bring their own cupping spoon and manual note-taking implements (e.g., notebook,
papers, pens, etc.). No electronic devices or items that can provide any additional resources for
competitors are allowed to be used during any competition time. Stopwatches or flashlights may be
used as long as that is their sole purpose (e.g., no cell phone for use as a stopwatch).
Prior to the start of the Event, a Competitor Orientation Meeting will take place, either online or in
person. Meeting details will be emailed to competitors ahead of the event. This meeting is mandatory
for all competitors. During this meeting the Event Manager will make announcements, explain the
competition flow, cover the competition schedule, and share images of the stage and backstage
areas. This will be an opportunity for competitors to ask questions and/or voice concerns to the Event
Manager. If a competitor does not attend the orientation meeting and has not made advance plans
with the WCE event organizer to address their absence, they are subject to disqualification by the
presiding head judges.
Temperature recording and roasting equipment information will also be shared at the Competitor
Orientation Meeting.
5.2. Coaches
Instructions or ‘coaching’ may not be provided to a competitor during their competition time under
penalty of disqualification. WCE encourages audience participation and enthusiastic fan support that
does not interfere with the competition. Coaches, supporters, friends, or family members are not
allowed on stage or to interfere with the competition while it is in progress, otherwise the competitor
is subject to disqualification by the stage manager or presiding head judge.
Competitors may have 1 coach with them during the open cupping time. However, no coaches are
allowed during the competitor’s Production Roast Evaluation cupping.
5.3. Emcees
There is no scored speaking element to this competition, but the competitors may be asked questions
by the emcee during competition time and should be available to respond to questions.
5.4. Interpreters
Competitors may bring their own interpreter. When speaking to the competitor, the interpreter is only
allowed to translate what the emcee or head judge has said. When a competitor speaks, the
interpreter is only allowed to translate exactly what the competitor has said. No additional competition
5.5. Be on Time
Competitors should be at the competition area 45 minutes prior to their scheduled competition and
practice times. Any competitor who is not onsite at the start of their competition time may be
disqualified. If the schedule is delayed, the competitor should still be prepared at their scheduled time.
Competitors should keep their stations clean and organized. If a competitor is disorganized,
disruptive, or otherwise unprofessional the head judge may charge a 1-point deduction on the Overall
Scoresheet.
6. Pre-Roasting
Competitors will have scheduled times for each part of Pre-Roasting. Competitors will not have access
to the competition equipment or coffees except during scheduled times.
A. Prior to Sample Roasting competitors will be scheduled for 1 hour of lab practice time.
B. Competitors can use this time to familiarize themselves with the laboratory equipment and
they may also use this time for green evaluation.
C. Green evaluation is not scored and for the competitor’s reference only.
A. Competitors will have between 30 minutes - 1 hour of sample roasting time, depending on the
sponsored machine type.
B. Competitors will be given 350-500 grams of each green coffee option. Sample roasting must
come from these provided samples. Competitors may green grade these samples for their
own reference during lab practice.
C. Sample roasts are for the competitor’s own personal use in order to determine roast
parameters and green coffee attributes and will not be submitted for evaluation.
D. Competitors are expected to work in an organized and respectful manner towards other
competitors and technical officials.
A. Competitors will have between 30 minutes and 1 hour of open cupping time.
B. Competitors may examine and handle (e.g., grind, brew, evaluate color, cup, etc.) their
roasted samples in the open cupping area during their scheduled time. Open cupping may be
scheduled over multiple days.
C. Competitors may bring 1 coach with them to Open Cupping. No more than 1 coach is
permitted.
D. Competitors, coaches, volunteers, etc. cannot remove any coffees used in the competition
from the competition area. This includes roasted sample, practice, and production coffees.
A. Competitors will have between 30 minutes and 1 hour of practice time on the roasting
machines.
B. WCE will provide coffee for practice roasting. This will not be the same coffee that is supplied
for the production roast, but a practice coffee for the purpose of allowing the competitor to gain
working knowledge of the machines and roast logging system provided.
C. Competitors can choose a selected profile from their practice time as a reference curve for
their competition roast if they prefer; they will need to clearly make note of this on their Roast
Plan and inform the stage manager or technical officials of their preferred roast profile number.
D. Competitors will receive time calls of 15 and 5 minutes remaining. Competitors may not start
a new roast if they have less than 5 minutes remaining.
B. The Roast Plan is a written log of the proposed roast profile(s) and the reasons for those
selected roast profile(s). Competitors should clearly describe the weight, temperature, color
reading of their roasted coffee, and provide a description of what the taste and flavor results
of the production roast will be, including the intensity of acidity and body. Competitors are
recommended to use the SCA standard flavor wheels as a reference tool.
C. Competitors will submit separate Roast Plans for Single Origin and Blend coffees.
E. If the competitor plans to do either a pre-roast or a post-roast blend, they should specify each
roast profile on each Roast Plan, including the ratio of the blend and the timing of blending.
F. The judges will evaluate “Cup-to-Profile” based on the accuracy of competitor’s taste
descriptions. Judges will consider the taste descriptors and the intensity of acidity, body, and
sweetness written on the Roast Plan. The expected Cup-to-Profile information from the
competitor’s Roast Plan will be disclosed by the stage manager to the judges during
deliberation and judges will score the Cup-to-Profile based on their notes from the cupping. If
multiple roasts are blended, competitors should describe the final product.
7. Production Roasting
Competitors will have scheduled times for Production Roasting. Competitors will not have access to
the competition equipment or coffees except during scheduled times.
A. Up to 6kg of each green coffee for Single Origin and Blend coffee roasts will be issued to the
competitor. Quantities of green coffee will be issued according to the competitor’s Roast Plan.
Green coffee will be issued before the competitor’s production roasting scheduled time slot. If
the competitor chooses to create a post-roast blend, the Roast Plan must state the quantities
and order of each different roast profile, and the ratio and timing of blending.
B. Competitors will have an assigned production roasting time and will be assigned 30 minutes
for Single Origin and 1 hour for Blend coffee roast(s). The roasting time for each category can
be scheduled for different times depending on the overall event schedule. Competitors are
responsible for making sure they know when their competition time is and making sure they
are there on time.
C. Competitors must place the coffee product on the provided table then raise their hand and call
“time” to end their competition time. Competitors may call "time" to stop their roasting time
before the end of the allotted time if they so choose.
D. Officials will warm up roasting machines for a period of 30 minutes before the first competitor
is to begin roasting. The roasting machine warm-up temperature will be announced at the
competitor orientation meeting. The machines will be returned to the same warm-up
temperature before the next competitor competes. Competitors may be given 5 minutes of
E. Competitors will receive time calls of 30, 15, and 5 minutes remaining. Competitors may not
start a new roast if they have less than 5 minutes remaining for their competition time.
F. Start temperature is the temperature recorded when the competitor moves the green coffee
hopper lever, and the coffee descends into the roast chamber. End temperature is the
temperature recorded when the competitor opens the roast chamber. Competitors should
check the official temperature recordings with the technical official before leaving the
competition station. More temperature recording information will be shared at the competitor
meeting.
G. Roasting machines will have time/temperature logging systems, which will log and display
real-time roasting information to the competitor, the technical officials, and to the audience.
H. The roast log information will be recorded and saved for the Roast Plan evaluation. For
accurate recording, competitors should push the stop button on the logging system
immediately after they dump the roasted beans into the tray, or at the same time. In case of
any technical issues on the logging system, technical officials will manually log the roasting
information, and this will replace the data from the logging system when agreed upon by the
head judge and stage manager.
I. Competitors will be given a demonstration and practice time on the time/temperature logging
system prior to competition. It is the responsibility of the competitor to ensure the roasting log
system is ready, enabled, and logging the roast accurately. Any roasts not logged will be
discarded. If the competitor attempts to change the system setting the competitor will be
disqualified.
J. If the sponsored roasting machine allows for airflow adjustment, the competitor may choose
to utilize this control if they want, however it will not be scored in any way. At the start of each
competitor’s competition time the airflow will be reset to a fixed setting announced at the
orientation meeting.
K. If the competitor creates a post-roast blend, they must submit a Roast Plan for each roast.
The final Roast Plan score for the post-roast blend will be the average of all submitted Roast
Plans.
L. Competitors are responsible for and in charge of their roasting process during the competition
time. The roasting process also includes charging, dropping, cleaning, and packaging. There
will be no assistance provided by volunteers or technical officials.
Unacceptable = 0
Acceptable = 1
Average = 2
Good = 3
Very Good = 4
Excellent = 5
Extraordinary = 6
The end weight of each roast will be measured by technical officials during the production roasting
time and scored. In order to earn a score of extraordinary, the roasted coffee will have no more than
a +/- 200 grams of variance. 1 point will be deducted for every subsequent 100g of weight variance.
A weight variance exceeding +/- 701 grams will result in 0 points.
Weight Evaluation Scale:
6 = +/-200g
5 = +/-201g to 300g
4 = +/- 301g to 400g
3 = +/- 401g to 500g
2=+/-501g to 600g
1=+/-601g to 700g
0= More than +/- 701g
The start and end temperatures of each roast will be measured by technical officials during the
production roasting time and scored. In order to earn a score of extraordinary, the temperature will
accurately be described on the Roast Plan Scoresheet. 1 point will be deducted for every subsequent
2ºC of temperature variance. A temperature variance exceeding +/- 10.1º will result in 0 points.
The roast color of each roast will be measured by technical officials during the production roasting
time and scored. In order to earn a score of extraordinary, the roast color will be described within 2
points of variance on the scale. 1 point will be deducted for every 1 point of variance. A roast color
variance exceeding +/- 7.1 points will result in 0 points.
Color Evaluation Scale:
6 = +/- 0 to 2
5 = +/- 2.1 to 3
4 = +/- 3.1 to 4
3 = +/- 4.1 to 5
2=+/- 5.1 to 6
1=+/- 6.1 to 7
0= More than +/- 7.1
B. The Production Roast Evaluation by judges for each coffee category may be scheduled on
different days depending on the overall event schedule.
C. The Production Roast Evaluation by judges for each coffee category may be comprised of 2
tables of cupping. The first table will consist of the submissions of the competitors whose
roasting times were in the first half of the schedule. The second table will consist of the
submissions from the remaining competitors.
E. 3 cupping judges and 1 non-scoring head judge who have overseen the previous day’s
competitions will cup together. Judges may not physically touch or lift the cups at any time,
and judges will 'break crusts' (stirring the cups to collapse the coffee grounds) as arranged by
head judge. Only cupping judge scores will count towards the total scores.
F. 3 to 5 cups of each coffee will be prepared to common industry cupping standards and
practices, and the cupping will proceed according to the direction and protocol established by
the head judge. All cupping judges and competitors should listen carefully to directions from
the head judge and follow all directions and protocols.
G. Judges and competitors will be expected to follow standard SCA cupping protocols and may
not physically touch or move cups at any time.
H. The head judge(s) will be designated by WCE (based on judging and professional experience)
to oversee the competition and lead the calibration, deliberation, and debrief during the
competition.
B. Sample should be ground immediately prior to cupping, no more than 15 minutes before
infusion with water.
C. Samples should be weighed out as whole beans to the ratio of 8.25g per 150ml of water.
D. Grind particle size will be slightly coarser than typically used for paper filter drip brewing. The
grinder setting used for the Production Roast Evaluation will be announced on site at the
orientation meeting at the discretion of the head judge. 3 to 5 cups from each sample should
be prepared to evaluate sample uniformity.
E. Prior to the first cup of each coffee, the grinder will be purged by grinding a cleansing quantity
of the sample. Then the grinding of each cup will commence, individually into the cupping
glasses or bowls, ensuring that the whole and consistent quantity of sample gets deposited
into each cup. A lid will be placed on each cup immediately after grinding.
F. Water used for cupping should be clean and odor free, but not distilled or softened. Ideal Total
Dissolved Solids are 125-175 ppm but should not be less than 50 ppm or more than 200 ppm.
G. Once the judges finish dry fragrance evaluation, the hot water should be poured directly onto
the measured grounds to the rim of the cup, making sure to wet all the grounds. The grounds
will be left to steep undisturbed for a period of 4 minutes before evaluation begins.
A. Samples should first be visually inspected for roast color. This is marked on the sheet and
may be used as a reference during the rating of specific flavor attributes. The sequence of
rating each attribute is based on the flavor perception changes caused by the decreasing
temperature of the coffee as it cools.
B. Fragrance/Aroma: Within 15 minutes of samples having been ground, the dry fragrance of the
samples will be evaluated by lifting the lid and sniffing the dry grounds.
C. After infusing with water, judges will evaluate the aroma of the crust and leave it unbroken for
at least 4 minutes. Judges will again evaluate the aroma while the crust is broken by stirring
3 times. The Fragrance/Aroma score is then marked on the basis of dry and wet evaluation.
D. Flavor, Aftertaste, Acidity, Body, Sweetness and Balance: When the sample has cooled to
71ºC (160ºF), about 8-10 minutes from infusion, evaluation of the coffee should begin. The
liquor is aspirated into the mouth in such a way as to cover as much area as possible,
especially the tongue and upper palate. Because the retro nasal vapors are at their maximum
intensity at these elevated temperatures, Flavor and Aftertaste are rated at this point.
E. As the coffee continues to cool (71ºC - 60ºC / 160ºF - 140ºF), Acidity, Body, Sweetness, and
Balance are rated next.
F. The different attributes are evaluated at several different temperatures (2 or 3 times) as the
sample cools. To rate the sample on the scale, circle the appropriate tick-mark on the form. If
a change is made (if a sample gains or loses some of its perceived quality due to temperature
changes), re-mark the horizontal scale and draw an arrow to indicate the direction of the final
score.
G. Evaluation of the coffee should cease when the sample reaches 21ºC (70ºF) and the Cup-To-
Profile score is determined by the judge after the blind evaluation, in deliberation, compared
to all of the combined attributes and tasting descriptions on the Roast Plan submitted by
competitors.
A. Scoring is be based on the Production Evaluation Scoresheet. Each scoresheet will be scored
out of 100.
a. The Production Cupping evaluation scale will be based on a standard cupping scale.
f. Judges should consider the numerical score to be a code that corresponds with each
descriptive word.
B. The Production Cupping form provides a mean of recording important flavor attributes in
coffee: Fragrance/Aroma, Flavor, Aftertaste, Acidity, Body, Sweetness, Balance, and Roasted
Defects. Judges base scores on the quality of these attributes by scoring higher for increased
quality and lower for decreased quality. The Cup-To-Profile score is based on the accuracy of
taste description provided by competitors.
C. Each cupping component is marked with a horizontal (left to right) scale, which is used to rate
the judge’s perception of relative quality of the particular component based upon their
perception of the coffee and experiential understanding of quality as a filter coffee product.
D. Some components are marked with vertical scales. The vertical (up and down) scales are
used to rank the intensity of the sensory component and are marked for reference and notation
and are not included in the score. In the case of the vertical scale for the Sweetness category,
the scale is used as a reference not as intensity, but as the development of sugars during
roasting (from sweet grains, to candy, to chocolate).
E. The SCA flavor wheel is used as a reference tool for the cupping judges to create a common
language for competitor feedback.
F. Fragrance/Aroma: The aromatic aspects include Fragrance (defined as the smell of the
ground coffee when still dry) and Aroma (the smell of the coffee when infused with hot water).
One can evaluate this at three distinct steps in the cupping process: (1) sniffing the grounds
placed into the cup before pouring water onto the coffee; (2) sniffing the aromas released as
the coffee steeps and crust is formed; and (3) sniffing the aromas released while breaking the
crust. Specific aromas can be noted under “qualities” and the intensity of the dry, break, and
G. Flavor: Flavor represents the coffee's principal character, the "mid-range" notes, in between
the first impressions given by the coffee's first aroma and acidity to its final aftertaste. It is a
combined impression of all the gustatory (taste buds) sensations and retro-nasal aromas that
go from the mouth to nose. The score given for Flavor should account for the intensity, quality
and complexity of its combined taste and aroma, experienced when the coffee is slurped into
the mouth vigorously so as to involve the entire palate in the evaluation.
H. Aftertaste: Aftertaste is defined as the length of positive flavor (taste and aroma) qualities
emanating from the back of the palate and remaining after the coffee is expectorated or
swallowed. If the aftertaste is short or unpleasant, a lower score would be given, and vice
versa.
I. Acidity: Acidity is often described as "brightness" when favorable or “sour” when unfavorable.
At its best, acidity contributes to a coffee's liveliness, sweetness, and fresh- fruit character and
is almost immediately experienced and evaluated when the coffee is first slurped into the
mouth. Acidity that is overly intense or dominating may be unpleasant, however, and
excessive acidity may not be appropriate to the flavor profile of the sample. The final score
marked on the horizontal tick-mark scale should reflect the judge’s perceived quality for the
Acidity.
J. Body: The quality of Body is based upon the tactile feeling of the liquid in the mouth, especially
as perceived between the tongue and roof of the mouth. Most samples with heavy Body may
also receive a high score in terms of quality due to the presence of brew colloids and sucrose.
Some samples with lighter Body may also have a pleasant feeling in the mouth, however.
Coffees expected to be high in Body, such as a Sumatra coffee, or coffees expected to be low
in Body, such as a Mexican coffee, can both receive equally high-quality scores although their
intensity rankings will be quite different.
L. Balance: How all the various aspects of Flavor, Aftertaste, Acidity, Sweetness, and Body of
the sample work together and complement or contrast each other is Balance. If the sample is
N. Defects: There are multiple Defects that may arise from the roasting process, which can affect
the quality of the sample negatively. They are scored on a zero to five scale based on the
intensity of the Defect as perceived by the judge. A score of zero would mean that the Defect
was not present and a score of five would indicate that the Defect was overwhelming the
sample. These Defects are: Underdevelopment, Overdevelopment, Baked, and Scorched.
Q. Baking: Baking relates to the stalling of the caramelization process. It tastes like popcorn, or
hard cereal/oat flavors. It may also be involved with cereal notes in the SCA Flavor Wheel.
R. Scorching: Scorching relates to the application of excessively high heat in roasting. It may
taste like ashy or burnt notes in the SCA Flavor Wheel.
The roasting defects listed above found by cupping judges and agreed upon by the head judge will
be part of the cupping score evaluation.
10. Scorekeeping
The WCRC official scorekeepers are responsible for adding all scores and for keeping all scores
confidential.
The competitors total score will be calculated by adding the Roast Plan scoresheet total(s) to the
Production Cupping scores from each sensory judge, and then by subtracting any penalties.
A. If there is a tie between 2 or more competitors, the competitor with the higher total Single
Origin Production Cupping score will be ranked higher.
B. If there is still a tie between 2 or more competitors, the competitor with the higher total Blend
Production Cupping score will be ranked higher.
C. If there is still a tie the competitor with the higher Single Origin Roast Plan Scoresheet will be
ranked higher.
10.4. Debriefing
Following the competition, competitors will have an opportunity to review their scoresheets with the
judges by the schedule announced by the event organizer, this may be in person or online.
Competitors will not be allowed to keep their original scoresheets before the WCE event manager
scans the copy of the scoresheets.
If a competitor has not finished their roasting or submission during their allotted time period, they are
allowed to proceed until the submission is completed. One-quarter (.25) point will be deducted for
every 1 second over the allotted time from the competitor’s total score, up to a maximum penalty of
15 points (1 minute). Any coffee submitted 1 minute after the conclusion of the competition time will
be disqualified (i.e., the evaluation of the coffee submission will not be added to the other evaluations
of the competitor).
D. Demonstrates the ability to develop the roast to meet the planned taste.
B. If the head judge agrees there is a technical problem that can be easily resolved, they will
decide the appropriate amount of time for the competitor to be credited. Once the technician
has fixed the problem, the competitor’s time will resume.
C. If the technical problem cannot be solved in a timely manner, the head judge will make the
decision whether or not the competitor should wait to continue their competition or stop and
start again at a reallocated time.
D. If a competitor must stop their competition time, the competitor, along with the head judge and
stage manager will reschedule the competitor to compete in full again at a later time.
E. If it is determined that the technical issue is due to competitor error, the head judge may
determine that no additional time will be given to the competitor, and the preparation or
competition time will resume without time being credited.
Most scorekeeping questions will be answered during competitor debrief. If a competitor objects to
the scores given by one or more judges, the competitor can meet with their head judge during the
competitor debriefing to explain their protest. If the head judge is unavailable, the competitor may
discuss with the Judge Operations Lead onsite. If the issue is not solved, the competitor may protest
in writing to WCE (see Appeals below). This will be reviewed by judge leadership and the WCE
Competition Operations Committee. They will make a decision and a representative of the WCE
Competition Operations Committee will inform the competitor of the decision.
If in the unlikely event that the head judge or any other WCRC personnel discovers or suspects
potential dishonest behavior by a WCRC judge during a competitor’s evaluation, then the following
will apply:
• The head judge will request the return of all applicable scoresheets from the official
scorekeeper.
• The WCE Staff and WCE Competition Operations Committee Chair(s) will then rule upon
the matter in a closed meeting.
If a competitor has an issue or protest to make regarding the WCRC during the competition, the
competitor should contact the WCRC event organizer. The event organizer will then determine
whether the issue can be resolved on-site at the WCRC, or whether the issue will require a written
appeal following the WCRC.
If the WCRC event organizer decides that the issue and/or protest can be solved on-site at the WCRC,
the WCRC event organizer will contact the involved party or parties to ensure fair representation. The
competitor’s issue and/or protest will be discussed, and a decision will be made jointly, on-site by the
WCRC event organizer and the designated onsite representative of the WCE Judge Operations Lead.
The WCRC event organizer will inform the competitor of the decision.
13.3. Appeals
If a person does not agree with a decision, they may appeal the decision in writing to the WCE
Competition Operations Committee. All decisions made by the committee are final.
• Name
• Date
• Party/Parties involved
• Contact information
The WCE Competition Strategic Committee will review written complaints or appeals and endeavor
to respond as soon as possible. Please note that the final resolution will be delivered within 30 days
of receipt. The WCE Competition Strategic Committee will contact the person in writing via email with
final rulings.
• Rounds/Competition Procedure: See sections 14.2 and 14.3 below. Competition Bodies are
required to have green grading as a part of their Championship.
• Competition Body Championship: Structure for the final Championship event must follow
the Rules and modifications outlined in the sections below, any further modifications must be
discussed with World Coffee Events [email protected].
• Practice Time: Scheduled practice time for competitors may vary and will be determined by
the Competition Body. However, every competitor must get the same amount of scheduled
practice time.
• Practice Location: Practice may be on stage, backstage, or off-site. The location of the
competitor’s practice time will be determined by the Competition Body.
• Provided Equipment: Competition Bodies are not required to use the same sponsored
equipment at the World Coffee Championships. If an equipment sponsor is acquired by a
• Competitor Debriefing: Judges will have time to debrief with competitors. The schedule for
this debriefing time will be set by the Competition Body. Debrief may be during and/or after
the event.
• Competitor Orientation: All competitors should get the same information in advance of the
competition. All competitors should be informed of what equipment will be used, practice
schedule, competition schedule, etc.
Competition Bodies are allowed to modify the WCRC competition format for ease of staging a WCRC
competition at the Competition Body level. To uphold the integrity of the competition, sanctioned
competitions must adopt the WCRC format, or the alternative format set out below. Any further
modifications to WCRC format must be reviewed and approved by WCE in advance of the
Competition Body competition.
i. Competition Bodies can ship competitor samples of the provided green coffee(s)
ahead of their competition if sample roasting will not be done onsite. If the Competition
Body ships the green coffee(s), competitors would analyze, and sample roast the
green coffee(s) using their own equipment prior to the competition.
ii. Competition Bodies will coordinate the time of delivery to ensure that all participants
have equal time & access to the green coffee sample prior to the date of the
Competition Body competition.
B. Production Roasting:
i. Competition Bodies can choose to use either Single Origin or a Blend roasting for their
competition, up to the time allowance and time constraints of the competition. The
roasting venue can be varied, according to what the organizer can establish, as long
as it facilitates any competition requirements. The roasting site does not need to be
open to public. However, the competition location and equipment must be announced
to competitors well in advance, and the entire competition, including roasting and
i. Production roast evaluation is held onsite per the WCRC evaluation protocol, and the
results are announced on the same day of cupping. Head judge and sensory judges
must be calibrated before the Production Roast Evaluation. The Production Roast
Evaluation and award ceremony may be held in a different location than the roasting
venue but must be open to the public.
All Competition Bodies that will hold a competition for WCRC should contact
[email protected] for assistance and additional oversight with their competition.
In addition to the competition steps listed in section 14.2.1. the Competition Body event also includes:
A. Green Evaluation: Competitors are given 30 minutes to 1 hour to evaluate the provided green
coffee for moisture, density, screen size, and defect count. Competitors can evaluate all green
coffees but should only submit the green evaluation sheet of the Single Origin coffee when
the green evaluation time is finished. This portion of the competition is scored through the
Single Origin Green Evaluation scoresheet. The coffee provided for Green Evaluation must
be a washed arabica.
Total scores at the Competition Body competition are based on the Production Roast Evaluation
results, Single Origin Green Evaluation, and Roast Plan scores of Single Origin and Blend coffee
category.
The Competition Body competition area will be equipped with the following additional equipment for
Green Evaluation:
• Green Evaluation Workstation (e.g., green grading table, green grading scoresheets, bags for
defects collection, etc.).
Prior to the competitors’ scheduled green grading and sample roasting competition time, competitors
are scheduled lab practice time. Competitors should use this time to familiarize themselves with the
laboratory equipment.
A. Each competitor will be given a 350g sample of Single Origin green coffee for the green
evaluation, along with a blank Green Evaluation Scoresheet to complete. (Quakers in the
scoresheet will be identified after production roasting, not at the green grading time).
B. Competitors are expected to demonstrate good knowledge of green coffee, its defects, and
an ability to use the equipment supplied to evaluate the coffee properties.
C. Green coffee evaluation will be done according to Standards and Definitions as defined in the
Standards and Definitions section below and following the usage guidelines explained during
the competitor orientation meeting.
D. Defect Count should be determined based on the guidelines detailed by the SCA Green
Arabica Coffee Classification and the SCA Defect Handbook that is based on a 350g sample.
No handbook will be allowed during the green evaluation time.
E. Competitors will have 30 minutes to 1 hour of green evaluation time to complete their Green
Evaluation Scoresheet for the Single Origin green coffee issued by the official. A competition
official will keep time of each competitor. No extra time will be given except in case of a
technical problem, but this will be at the discretion of the head judge or stage manager and
the technical problem must be raised by the competitor before the completion of competition
time.
F. Once a competitor has finished green grading, they must submit their green evaluation
scoresheet with the defects, separated into a bag/container provided, to be checked by the
head judge or a certified Q grader.
G. If the competitor has not finished their submission during the allotted time period, they will be
allowed to proceed until the submission is completed. One-quarter (.25) point will be deducted
from the competitor’s total score for every second over the allotted time, up to a maximum
penalty of 15 points (1 minute). If a competitor is still working at 1 minute past their allotted
time, the maximum penalty will be applied, and work must stop. No work done after this time
will be evaluated.
H. Competitors will evaluate moisture using the moisture-measuring device provided by the
Competition Body. Competitors must show that they have the ability to measure the water
content of green coffee.
I. Competitors will evaluate density, using the equipment supplied by the Competition Body.
Competitors must show that they have the ability to measure the density of green coffee.
A. Coffee Density – A density-measuring device may be provided to measure the density of green
beans. The density calculation protocol below will be used if the device is not provided:
i. A measurement of mass density of green coffee is calculated by the mass of coffee (in
grams) divided by the volume of coffee (in liters), as measured in a container of known
volume. It is not necessary to calculate for interstitial space (air between individual
beans), which is treated as a constant and is ignored. In this competition, the weight
of the coffee will be measured in a 250mL vessel.
C. Screen Size – A stack of sizing screens are used to physically separate a green coffee sample
by bean size. The screen sizes are increments of 1/64th of an inch, (e.g., screen 15 has holes
of 15/64 inch). The resulting data should be notated as one, two, or three screen-numbers (no
more than three of mass retained on that particular screen, if and only if as they occur above
10% of the total sample mass).
D. Defect Count – Green coffee defects should be identified and counted from an industry-
standard 350g sample. Competitors will be provided a 350g separate sample of Single Origin
green coffee, and identify and count the defects listed in the green evaluation scoresheet: full
black, partial black, full sour, partial sour, etc. Competitors should submit all the defects
(except quakers) they found from the Single Origin sample in the provided bag when they
submit their green evaluation scoresheet. Quaker(s) will be identified and counted from the
Single Origin production roast and evaluated by judges after the submission. Competitors
should submit any quaker(s) found from their Single Origin production roast which will be
submitted for evaluation, in a separate provided bag that will be provided when they submit
their Single Origin production roast.
The competitor’s total score will be tallied by adding the sum of scoresheets from all competition
components (i.e., Production Roast Evaluation, Green Evaluation, and Roast Plan), then by deducting
any penalties.
If a competitor has an issue or protest to make regarding their Competition Body Championship during
the event, the first step should be to contact the event organizer and/or WCE Representative on site.
All problems should be attempted to be resolved as soon as possible. On-site solutions are the most
effective and appropriate. Appeals made after the competition’s end are more difficult to effectively
arbitrate.
If the event organizer decides the issue and/or protest can be solved on-site, the event organizer will
contact the involved party or parties to ensure fair representation. The competitor’s issue and/or
protest will be discussed, and a decision will be made jointly, on-site by the event organizer and the
designated onsite WCE Representative. The event organizer and/or WCE Rep will inform the
competitor of the decision.
If the issue requires a written appeal, this should be made directly to the Competition Body and WCE
Representative via email within 24 hours of the incident. If the appeal is logistics-related, the CB is
fully responsible for the investigation and any arbitration if applicable. If the appeal is judge or rules
related, the WCE Representative may investigate the issue and provide a suggested arbitration. The
CB and WCE Rep must report all written appeals to WCE within 24 hours of receipt. However, WCE
does not directly certify or manage Competition Body judges or volunteers, and so cannot arbitrate
their actions. Appeals from CB events may take additional time to address; the person submitting the
appeal should expect to see resolution within 30 days.