Prof. Marcus Blackwell

Brazilian Coffee Pairings Research: PhD Study Uncovers Cultural and Sensory Insights into Coffee and Food Pairings Across Brazil

Exploring Brazil's Coffee and Food Pairing Traditions Through UNICAMP PhD Research

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Discovering Brazil's Coffee Pairing Traditions Through PhD Research

Brazil, the world's largest coffee producer, boasts a rich culture where coffee transcends mere beverage status, embedding itself in daily rituals and social bonds. A groundbreaking PhD study by Anna Luiza Santana Neves at the University of Campinas (UNICAMP) delves into how Brazilians intuitively pair coffee with food, blending sensory science, cultural anthropology, and consumer behavior. This research illuminates everyday habits shaped by regional diversity, nostalgia, and emotional connections, offering fresh perspectives for both casual drinkers and the specialty coffee sector.8685

With over 125 million coffee consumers—more than half the population—pairings evoke national identity, from morning café com leite to afternoon breaks. Neves' nationwide investigation reveals that these combinations prioritize lived experiences over gourmet rules, highlighting untapped potential in milk-based and cold brew innovations.86

The Cultural Backbone of Brazilian Coffee Consumption

Coffee arrived in Brazil in the 18th century, evolving into a cornerstone of social life. Today, as forecasts predict a record 66.2 million 60-kg bags harvested in 2026—a 17.1% rise from 2025—domestic consumption remains robust despite a 2.31% dip in 2025 due to high prices.5059 Traditional brews dominate (67% of drinkers), characterized by medium-high bitterness, low acidity, and affordability, often prepared via Melitta filter (66.7%) or espresso (53.8%).86

Regional variations abound: Northeastern staples like tapioca reflect Indigenous and African influences, while Southern pão de queijo embodies comfort. Younger generations drive a 33% specialty segment, blending arabica (39% exclusive preference) with robusta, yet pairings remain rooted in emotion and memory.85

UNICAMP PhD Researcher's Innovative Methodology

Neves, in UNICAMP's Department of Food Science and Nutrition, employed a mixed-methods design. Phase one surveyed 300 daily drinkers across Brazil's five regions using free-listing to capture instinctive food associations, yielding 1,240 terms. Foods cited by ≥10% formed 14 items, clustered hierarchically into three groups. Socio-demographics and habits (e.g., 32.2% species-agnostic) contextualized responses.86

Phase two involved 48 projective mapping participants (UNICAMP affiliates and locals) positioning photos of 11 coffees (espresso, cold brew, cappuccino, etc.) and 12 foods by sensory fit, preference, and context. Multiple factor analysis visualized compatibilities, triangulated with descriptors.85 This rigorous approach bridges qualitative culture with quantitative sensory data, exemplifying advanced food science at Brazilian universities.

Anna Luiza Santana Neves conducting coffee pairings research at UNICAMP

Three Core Clusters of Coffee-Food Pairings

The study identified three intuitive clusters:

  • Comforting and Traditional: Bread with butter, pão de queijo, homemade cake—practical for breakfast/snacks, evoking home and nostalgia.
  • Versatile and Regional: Corn couscous, tapioca, toast, cookies—starchy savories with diverse toppings, strong in Northeast.
  • Indulgent and Experiential: Chocolate, cheese, sweets, milk—for pleasure breaks; fat balances bitterness, textures enhance.

These reflect perceptual (taste/texture), conceptual (categorization), and affective (emotion) drivers.86

Projective Mapping Reveals Beverage-Food Dynamics

Black coffees (filtered, espresso) aligned left with starches like pão de queijo and bread; ristretto/lungo with sweets/chocolate; milk-based right, unpaired; cold brew isolated as novel. Cheese bridged black coffees, its umami/fat countering bitterness—a breakfast staple.85

Such mappings underscore innovation gaps: Develop pairings for lattes or cold brews to engage youth. Neves notes, "The next frontier in specialty coffee may be not only how we drink it, but what we eat with it and why."86

black ceramic mug with brown liquid

Photo by vitor camilo on Unsplash

Sensory Science and Cultural Harmony in Pairings

Sensory compatibility hinges on chemistry: Acidity cuts fat (fruity arabica + pão de queijo), sweetness tempers bitterness (ruby chocolate + robusta), textures contrast. Culturally, pairings foster identity—coffee as social glue.86

UNICAMP's expertise shines, paralleling projects like laser-assisted coffee fingerprinting or spectroscopic analysis at other institutions, advancing Brazil's sensory research leadership.7071 For academics, this exemplifies research jobs in food science.

Read the full SCA article

Regional Variations and Everyday Rituals

Northeast: Tapioca/couscous versatility. South: Pão de queijo comfort. Nationwide, starch dominance signals practicality amid Brazil's vast geography. Generational shifts: Specialty appeals to digital natives co-creating experiences via events.85

Menus could leverage this: Recommend cheese-espresso for tradition, chocolate-ristretto for indulgence. Cafés hosting tastings build community, echoing Neves' vision.

Implications for Brazil's Specialty Coffee Evolution

With market growth to 7M tons by 2034 (CAGR 5.23%), pairings drive differentiation.53 UNICAMP research positions universities as innovation hubs, attracting research assistant jobs and collaborations.

Challenges: Educating on species (32% unaware), bridging traditional-specialty divide. Solutions: Pairing workshops, regional menus.

Coffee TypeIdeal PairingsSensory Benefit
Filtered/EspressoPão de queijo, breadAcidity balances fat
Ristretto/LungoChocolate, cookiesSweetness offsets bitterness
Milk-basedInnovation neededTexture enhancement

UNICAMP and Brazil's Higher Ed in Food Science

UNICAMP leads with Neves' work, alongside multisensory studies by Fabiana Carvalho. This PhD exemplifies Brazil's higher ed strength in agrifood, fostering Brazil university jobs and global impact.73

Related: UFLA's sensory profiles, cross-cultural tasters.15 Aspiring researchers, check academic CV tips.

Future Trends and Actionable Insights

Outlook: Pairing events, cold brew hybrids, robusta revival. For industry: Train staff on clusters; for consumers: Experiment regionally. Academics: Expand to chemical analyses.86

Neves personally favors fruity coffee with pão de queijo. Explore Rate My Professor for UNICAMP faculty.

blue neon light coffee signage

Photo by Thiago Cardoso on Unsplash

This UNICAMP-led study enriches Brazil's coffee narrative, blending academia with culture. For higher ed careers, visit higher-ed-jobs, university-jobs, research-jobs, higher-ed-career-advice, or rate-my-professor.

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Prof. Marcus Blackwell

Contributing writer for AcademicJobs, specializing in higher education trends, faculty development, and academic career guidance. Passionate about advancing excellence in teaching and research.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the main focus of Anna Luiza Santana Neves' PhD research?

The study examines everyday coffee-food pairings in Brazil using sensory science and cultural analysis, identifying clusters like comforting traditional foods.

🎓Which university is conducting this coffee pairings research?

University of Campinas (UNICAMP), Department of Food Science and Nutrition, a leader in Brazilian agrifood studies. Explore Brazil higher ed.

📊What methodology was used in the study?

Mixed methods: Online survey with 300 participants (free-listing) and projective mapping with 48 for coffee beverage positioning.

🍞What are the three clusters of pairings identified?

Comforting & Traditional (pão de queijo), Versatile & Regional (tapioca), Indulgent & Experiential (chocolate, cheese).

🌍How does culture influence Brazilian coffee pairings?

Pairings evoke nostalgia and identity, rooted in regional histories like Northeast Indigenous foods, beyond sensory rules.

What pairings work best with black coffees?

Starch-rich like bread, pão de queijo, toast—acidity balances fat and bitterness.

🥛Why are milk-based coffees unpaired in the study?

Perceived as standalone; opportunities for innovation in specialty pairings.

📈What is Brazil's coffee consumption landscape?

125M consumers; 67% traditional, 33% specialty; record 2026 harvest amid price-driven dips.

💼How does this research impact the specialty coffee industry?

Informs menus, events, and recommendations, bridging traditional and modern consumers.

🔬What career opportunities arise from such research?

Food science PhDs open research jobs and higher-ed-jobs in Brazil's universities.

📚Are there related studies at Brazilian universities?

Yes, e.g., UFLA sensory profiles, UNICAMP multisensory perception—strengthening higher ed research.

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