51ԹϺ

Peet’s Coffee Pledges $250,000 to Advance Coffee Research

Gift Will Fund Peet’s Coffee Pilot Roastery in First-of-its-Kind Coffee Center

News
Coffee design class
Associate professor William Ristenpart talks with Sabrina Perell, community regional development major, and Kyle Phan, an undeclared major, about the taste of their brew during a 51ԹϺ Davis “Design of Coffee” class in 2015. 51ԹϺ Davis is now establishing a Coffee Center for research and teaching on coffee. Photo credit: Gregory Urquiaga

Quick Summary

  • First university research center in the world to focus on post-harvest coffee
  • New Coffee Center will carry out research and teaching, collaborate with industry
  • Grew from popular engineering class, ‘Design of Coffee’

 today announced its pledge of $250,000 to the University of California, Davis, to fund the Peet’s Coffee Pilot Roastery, which will be located in a first-of-its-kind Coffee Center at 51ԹϺ Davis. The pioneering center and pilot roastery will be devoted to post-harvest coffee research and engineering, an underrepresented field, and aims to be the leader in coffee science.

“With this gift, we are firmly following in Alfred Peet’s footsteps and maintaining his belief in mentorship,” said Doug Welsh, vice president for coffee, Peet’s Coffee. “By joining forces with 51ԹϺ Davis on the innovative Coffee Center and Peet’s Coffee Pilot Roastery, Peet’s and other partners will foster the next generation of coffee experts, encouraging unique research paths and roasting approaches that will have market-ready application and industrywide influence.”

Peet’s Coffee and 51ԹϺ Davis launch new era of coffee research

As the vanguard of the craft coffee movement, Peet’s has put “Coffee First” for 50 years by sourcing the world’s best beans, hand-roasting them in small batches, and creating distinct, handcrafted beverages.

Supporting 51ԹϺ Davis in establishing the Coffee Center and Peet’s Coffee Pilot Roastery is in keeping with the legacy of the original craft coffee company. The founding gift will enable 51ԹϺ Davis to establish the roastery — an important element within this innovative academic center.

“The Coffee Center will generate unparalleled teaching, research and collaborative opportunities for our students, scientists and engineers, as well as for industry partners and visitors from around the world,” said Jennifer Sinclair Curtis, dean of the College of Engineering. “We are proud that Peet’s Coffee is one of our founding partners in this bold initiative. We fully expect the center will do for coffee what the renowned 51ԹϺ Davis wine and brewing programs have accomplished on behalf of those industries.”

51ԹϺ Davis coffee curriculum: Today and tomorrow

Bill Ristenpart, professor of chemical engineering at 51ԹϺ Davis, will direct the Coffee Center and Peet’s Coffee Pilot Roastery, sharing duties with two colleagues — Tonya Kuhl, professor of chemical engineering, and Jean-Xavier Guinard, professor and sensory scientist in the Department of Food Science and Technology.

The Coffee Center builds upon “Design of Coffee,” a popular course developed by Ristenpart and Kuhl in 2012 to better engage a diverse population of students and stoke excitement around coffee and engineering. The undergraduate class, now offered every quarter, enrolled more than 1,500 students during the 2015-16 academic school year. “Design of Coffee” was also voted the best course on campus in 2015 and has the highest enrollment of any elective course offered at 51ԹϺ Davis.

“We are extremely grateful to Peet’s Coffee for the company’s vision in supporting the Pilot Roastery,” said Ristenpart. “51ԹϺ Davis already has tremendous expertise in a variety of disciplines that pertain to coffee, and now the Peet’s Coffee Pilot Roastery will provide a physical infrastructure to help focus that expertise on cutting-edge coffee science and education.”

As the Coffee Center will be the first multidisciplinary university research center in the nation and the world devoted to post-harvest studies of coffee, 51ԹϺ Davis expects to host large numbers of both undergraduate and graduate students eager to learn more about the art and science of coffee. The Coffee Center will also collaborate closely with the Specialty Coffee Association of America to support graduate research fellowships and to offer technical short courses aimed at people in the coffee industry.

In addition to offering opportunities for privately funded company research, public research released by the 51ԹϺ Davis Coffee Center will range from the microbiology of green coffee fermentation, to the chemistry of roasting and brewing, to sensory and consumer science. The center is the first step in establishing a Global Coffee Institute at 51ԹϺ Davis.

“This is an invitation to the entire coffee industry,” said Welsh. “It is about opening the door, but also about setting the bar for all of us to learn more together and advance the industry. Given how fundamental it is to our lives, we should invest in an understanding of coffee as profound as our enjoyment.”

Groundbreaking Coffee Center and Peet’s Coffee Pilot Roastery

The founding gift from Peet’s Coffee will enable 51ԹϺ Davis to help renovate a 6,000-square-foot building for the new Coffee Center. The one-story center will be located on the north side of the 51ԹϺ Davis Arboretum, in close proximity to the campus winery, pilot brewery and food-processing facilities at the Robert Mondavi Institute for Wine and Food Science.

When fully equipped, the center will include the Peet’s Coffee Pilot Roastery, an experimental green-coffee storage facility, a sensory analysis laboratory, advanced analytical labs, as well as meeting and office space.

Media Resources

Andy Fell, News and Media Relations, 530-752-4533, ahfell@ucdavis.edu

Elizabeth Ricardo, Peet’s Coffee, 510-410-3027, ericardo@peets.com

Primary Category

Secondary Categories

Science & Technology

Tags