The Third Wave of Coffee
Third-wave coffee, a term formally coined in the 1999, represents a period of coffee that is highly focused on single-origin beans and knowledge about the farming and processing practices that yield the crop. Emerging in the 1980s, it is also marked by lighter roast profiles, manual brewing methods like French presses and pour-overs, and high freshness transparency.
The Specialty Coffee Association of America provided a platform for this new style of roasting and brewing. It established the “Gold Cup” award to recognize restaurants that adopted and met these quality standards.
Specialty Coffee Association of America

The SCAA formed in 1982 under the direction of several industry professionals with the purpose of setting quality standards for specialty coffee. This global coffee trade association focused on science-based research and education. In the 1990s, Ted Lingle, then-president of the SCAA, published a handbook on the science of brewing in an effort to establish scientific brewing standards for the coffee industry.
In 2017 the SCAA merged with the Specialty Coffee Association of Europe to form the Specialty Coffee Association (SCA).


Ted R. Lingle, Coffee Brewing Handbook (draft), 1994.
Russ Kramer Papers, D-817


Specialty Coffee Association Records, D-818