The World of Caffeine (41 page)

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Authors: Bonnie K. Bealer Bennett Alan Weinberg

BOOK: The World of Caffeine
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The tests of tea showed a comparable variation in caffeine potency, although, of course, the average levels for tea were lower than those for coffee. According to the Republic of Tea Home Page, the following three factors determine how much caffeine is present in a cup of tea:

  • The longer the leaves have been fermented, the greater their caffeine content. Green tea, which is unfermented, has the least caffeine; oolong, which is partially fermented, has about 50 percent more; and black tea, which is fully fermented, has three times as much.
  • The longer tea is brewed, the more caffeine is present in the final drink. A cup of black tea infused for three minutes has 20 to 40 mg, while black tea infused for four minutes has 40 to 100 mg.
    13
  • Finally, the caffeine in leaf powder, such as is found in tea bags, is more readily dissolved in water, and, all other factors being equal, it will have almost twice the caffeine as higher-quality full-leaf tea.
    14

It is almost impossible to guess or determine how much caffeine is in the coffee we order at restaurants. Few field studies of caffeine content have been made. The following results are adapted from one such study, commissioned by New York City’s WABC-TV Eyewitness News in December 1994, from Associated Analytical Laboratories. Note that a “medium” serving can be more than 13 ounces, and that the caffeine content per serving varies, even among these four samples of coffee, by nearly 100 percent.

Caffeine Content of Coffeehouse Coffees

Brand, Size                  
        
Net Serving Size              
 
Total mg                  
     
mg/6oz                  
    
Dunkin’ Donuts, regular
12.6 oz
275
147.6
Cooper’s, medium
9.9 oz
146
99.6
West Side Deli, medium
13.5 oz
295
103.8
Dalton’s Coffee, regular
8.9 oz
148
99.7

Similar discrepancies have been observed among the decaffeinated coffees served at leading chains across the country. In 1995,
Self
magazine submitted nine samples of decaffeinated coffee for analysis to Southern Testing & Research Laboratories in North Carolina. Most decaffeinated coffees had less than 10 mg per 6-ounce cup, but Starbucks had more than twice that much. As you review this chart, which also includes data from other similar studies, remember that most cups actually served contain at least 8 ounces of fluid. Results demonstrating such wide variability help to explain how even one cup of coffee sometimes seems to send you up like rocket, while other times a few cups won’t even start your engines.

Caffeine Content in “Decaf”

Brand                   
                           
Mg/6-oz serving                  
           
Starbucks decaffeinated
25
Dunkin’ Donuts decaffeinated
10
Au Bon Pain decaffeinated
7
Starbucks decaffeinated espresso
6
McDonald’s decaffeinated
5
7-Eleven decaffeinated
4
Tetley decaffeinated tea
4
Cooper’s decaffeinated
4
Dalton’s decaffeinated
2
Sanka
1.5

Myths and misconceptions about caffeine content abound. The amount of caffeine that ends up in your cup of coffee is in part a function of the amount of caffeine contained in the beans you start with. In
Appendix B
is a list of the caffeine content of various beans as a percentage of total weight.
15
In general, the cheaper robusta beans contain almost double the caffeine found in the more expensive arabica beans. Although the two have an otherwise similar compositional profile of such components as minerals, proteins, and carbohydrates, arabica beans also contain significantly more lipids. Tea’s variations in caffeine content depend primarily on the age of the leaves and on how the tea leaves have been cured. The caffeine content by percentage of weight of
sen-cha,
or green tea, is 2.8 percent; of
ma-cha,
or green powdered tea, is 4.6 percent; and of
ban-cha,
or coarse tea, is 2 percent.
16
Note that
ma-cha,
the tea most commonly used in the Japanese tea ceremony, which is green tea made from the smallest leaves of the just budding plant, has the highest concentrations of caffeine by weight of any tea, or of any plant source, for that matter. No caffeine is found in brews from herb and mint teas, as would be expected, since the plants from which they are made do not contain caffeine.

Maté also is an important source of caffeine, but it is even more difficult to estimate how much caffeine is in a cup of maté than it is to do so for a cup of coffee or tea. In addition to
Ilex paraguariensis,
as many as sixty varieties of plants are used in making the drink. To make matters even more confusing, the caffeine content of maté leaves varies widely according to their age at the time of harvesting. Young maté leaves have at least 2 percent caffeine of their dry weight, while adult leaves, those more than a year old, have about 1.5 percent, and old leaves, those more than two years old, have only about .7 percent.

Guarana is a major source of caffeine for millions of South Americans and is also widely sold in Europe and the United States in herbal elixirs and powders in health food stores. Typical of these products is “Magic Power,” sold in two forms and which has the following ingredients (assuming 5 percent caffeine by weight in seeds as stated in their literature):

  • 15 ml alcohol with 5 g guarana seeds, 250 mg caffeine per bottle
  • Guarana capsules with 500 mg seeds, 25 mg caffeine per capsule

In Brazil, where guarana carbonated drinks are widely available, some consumers claim the effects are somewhat different from coffee’s, because guarana doesn’t produce jitters. This difference may be their imagination, or it may, as we have seen in other cases of natural drugs, be the result of the chemical complexity of guarana or the fact that it contains other active alkaloids in addition to caffeine.

The amount of caffeine found in chocolate and other cacao products is relatively small. A 1.58-ounce milk chocolate Hershey bar has 12 mg, and an average 6-ounce cup of chocolate prepared from a mix has 5 mg.
Appendix B
lists the caffeine content of other chocolate products.
17

So how much caffeine
is
in a cup of coffee? Most cups of coffee of about 6 ounces probably contain between 60 and 180 mg of caffeine, which means that 100 mg, the value usually adduced, is as good as any. This is the value repeated throughout this book, and it is meant to be understood in the context of all the reservations and qualifications expressed in this section. The actual content in your cup can range from 40 mg to 400 mg.

Soft Drinks

Soft drinks are a major dietary source of caffeine. The amount in each varies widely. Jolt Cola, at or near the top of any list, has 70 mg in a 12-ounce can, CocaCola has 46 mg, and Canada Dry Diet Cola has 1 mg. Coca-Cola has 7.2 mg more caffeine in a 12-ounce serving than its nearest rival in market share, Pepsi, according to the FDA. The agency says the differences don’t appear to have any health consequences. Even though caffeine is on the FDA’s GRAS list, the list of food additives “generally recognized as safe,” the agency has expressed reservations about excessive caffeine consumption by children and any consumption by pregnant women. But FDA spokesman Jim Greene said in reference to most of the soft drinks ranked, “the effect of the milligram differences among these products is basically nil in the long run.”

Interestingly, 7-Up, one of the best-selling soft drinks in the United States, has made the absence of caffeine the basis for a recent advertising campaign.

Over-the-Counter and Prescription Medications

Caffeine is used as one ingredient in a variety of over-the-counter and prescription compounds. The FDA’s National Center for Drugs and Biologics lists more than one thousand over-the-counter brands with caffeine as an ingredient. These fall into four categories: analgesics, cold remedies, appetite suppressants, and diuretics. Several of the most popular brands are listed in the appendix. In addition, caffeine is the only active ingredient in a number of so-called alertness aids, such as Vivarin, which contains 200 mg per pill, and NoDoz, which contains 100 mg per pill.

Where the Theobromine and Theophylline Are

Each of the methylxanthines considered here—caffeine, theobromine, and theophylline—acts as a physical and mental stimulant, but each has a somewhat different profile of somatic effects. For example, theobromine is a more potent diuretic than either caffeine or theophylline, while theophylline is more suitable for use as a bronchodilator. Cacao is the major source of theobromine, although it contains small amounts of caffeine as well, and its total methylxanthine content will vary with the variety of the plant and the fermentation process. Tea contains a small amount of theophylline in addition to its predominant methylxanthine, caffeine. Maté leaves are a small source of these methylxanthines, though the amounts are so small that some investigators have failed to detect them. The dried leaf has been reported to contain 0.3 percent theobromine and .004 percent theophylline by weight.
18
In addition to caffeine, theobromine, and theophylline, there are other, so-called minor, purine alkaloids, which are found in extremely tiny amounts in coffee.

Methylxanthine Content of Cacao Products

Chocolate Product
Percent Methylxanthine by Weight
Sweet chocolate
.36% to .63% theobromine
.017% to .125% caffeine
Cocoa butter
1.9% theobromine
.21%caffeine
Chocolate liquor or baking chocolate
1.2% theobromine
.21% caffeine
Milk chocolate
.15% theobromine
.02% caffeine

Methylxanthine Content of Various Botanicals

Product
Caffeine %
Theophylline %
Theobromine %
Coffee
1.34
trace
trace
Tea
3.23
.03
.17
Cacao
.20
trace
1.50
Maté, cola nut,
2.0

.10
gnarana
Extracting Caffeine: Industrial Processes and Mr. Wizard’s Laboratory

The United States imports great quantities of caffeine for medical purposes and for spiking soft drinks, most of which is extracted from poor-quality coffee beans or waste tea leaves or collected as a by-product of the decaffeination of coffee and tea. Two techniques are used to produce decaffeinated coffee: bean decaffeination and extract decaffeination. Both are performed on the raw beans to minimize spoilage or loss of aroma.

Bean decaffeination is used when the bean moisture level is less than 40 percent. This process involves static or rotating drums with a water-saturated solvent, such as dichloromethane or supercritical carbon dioxide, selective for caffeine.

Extract decaffeination is used when the bean moisture content is more than 60 percent. In this process, raw coffee beans are usually soaked in nearly boiling water for a few minutes to a few hours, and the resulting liquid is decaffeinated either by liquidliquid extraction with any of the solvents used in the first method or by selective absorprion of caffeine on acid-treated active carbon. Alternative adsorption processes which do not rely on solvents to recover the caffeine from the extract are called “water decaffeination.”
19

Extracting caffeine crystals from tea or coffee is a standard first-year organic chemistry experiment. Many people, far removed from academic laboratories, have wondered if there was some easy way to do the same. An amateur chemist provided an approximation of a home extraction process, although with the availability of Vivarin at every corner pharmacy and supermarket, its hard to understand why anyone would risk trying it, something that we, in any case, strongly recommend against:

Mix 180 proof ethanol with very finely ground coffee and mash together. Filter off the solvent. Evaporate the paste and, when dry, dissolve in boiling vodka, until the volume is reduced by about 80 percent. Allow the liquid to sit and cool for two days. If you have done everything right, when you return you should find white caffeine crystals precipitating from the solution.
20

Pure caffeine is extremely toxic, and must be handled with hooded ventilation systems, masks, and gloves. Largely for this reason, chemical supply companies are not permitted to sell it to individual purchasers.

Jar containing pure pharmaceutical-grade caffeine, featuring a chilling warning label, which reads in part:
“WARNING! MAY BE
HARMFUL IF INHALED OR SWALLOWED. HAS CAUSED MUTAGENIC AND REPRODUCTIVE EFFECTS IN
LABORATORY ANIMALS. INHALATION CAUSES RAPID HEART RATE, EXCITEMENT, DIZZINESS, PAIN, COLLAPSE,
HYPOTENSION, FEVER, SHORTNESS OF BREATH. MAY CAUSE HEADACHE, INSOMNIA, NAUSEA, VOMITING,
STOMACH PAIN, COLLAPSE AND CONVULSIONS. MAY CAUSE DIGESTIVE DISTURBANCES, CONSTIPATION,
CARDIAC DISORDERS, AND DEPRESSION. MAY CAUSE EPIGASTRIC PAIN, CARDIAC AND RESPIRATORY
DISORDERS, AND DEPRESSED MENTAL STATES. EYE CONTACT MAY CAUSE IRRITATION, REDNESS, AND
CONJUNCTIVITIS. INGESTION MAY PRODUCE GASTROINTESTINAL IRRITATION, VOMITING, AND CONVULSIONS.
FATALITIES HAVE BEEN KNOWN TO OCCUR.
Target Organs Affected:
Eyes, Skin, Central Nervous System, Repiratory and Gastrointestinal Tract.” (Photograph by Paul Barrow, Biomedical Communications, University of Pennsylvania Medical Center, © 1999 Bennett Alan Weinberg and Bonnie K.Bealer.)

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