I am currently using Stumptown Founder’s blend. It is a bit pricey and is Light-Medium at around 15-16 dollars at Target here in the US.

  • @NatureLover@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    Stumptown are great roasters. I love to experiment with local roasters. I travel quite a bit and I try to pick up a pound from a local roaster wherever I go. I used be pretty smug in thinking that the top tier roasters in San Francisco would beat a small town roaster every time. My opinion has changed, I’ve been super impressed by a lot of smaller roaster.

    It seems like we are both aware that lots of beans not labeled as espresso are great for it. I tend to go for light to medium roasts for both pour overs and espresso. I also prefer malty/chocolatey profile beans over the citrusy ones. That is not a hard rule but light roasted citrusy beans can be overwhelming in espresso

    • @NatureLover@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      I also home roast 80% of my beans. I’ve been home roasting for over 25 years. I’m receiving 25 pounds from Sweet Marias today. I picked up 5 pounds each of the following:

      -Congo Organic Kivu Kalehe

      -Costa Rica Tarrazú Cerro La Cruz

      -Java Pulp Natural Gambung Robusta

      -Ethiopia Dry Process Mahamed Aba Nura

      -Kenya Nyeri Kiaguthu Peaberry

      I’m looking forward to playing around with blending with the Java Robusta

      • @NatureLover@lemmy.world
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        22 years ago

        Quality un-roasted green beans tend to be in the range of $6 to $8 a pound. On a light roast, about 15% of the weight is lost in roasting. $6 to $8 a pound un-roasted coffee turns into $6.90 to $9.20 a pound roasted. This doesn’t include cost of the equipment, wear and tear and electricity.

        It seems like the going price of artisanal roasted coffee is $12 to $18 pound. IMO, is completely justifiable to charge based on their wholesale cost of goods and labor costs these days.

    • @neanderthal@lemmy.worldOP
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      12 years ago

      Ditto with the non dark roasts. I wish I remembered the exact roast, but I was really pleasantly surprised by one of the light roast Starbucks beans I picked up because they were cheap.

  • @root@lemmy.world
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    22 years ago

    We alternate between

    • Kicking Horse Cliff Hanger
    • Bar9 (found them when in Washington, delicious)
    • Whatever we get each month from our Atlas subscription
  • @Aeoneir@lemmy.world
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    12 years ago

    I use Wegmans bulk espresso beans. It costs $18 for 2 and a half pounds. If I want something that tastes good, there’s a local coffee shop that has dark roast beans that I love

  • @DanielDonenfeld@lemmy.one
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    12 years ago

    I’ve been purchasing most of my beans at Whole Foods, they have a bunch of local roasters, you just have to do some searching to find ones with a good roast date. I pay ~15 USD for a 12oz bag but it goes from 12 up past 20.

  • PAPPP
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    12 years ago

    My usual everyday bean is one of the Kroger “Private Selection” (nicer store brand) coffees. They’re readily available whole bean, not produced by a company known for any exceedingly distasteful behaviors, under $10/12oz, and their selection of fair-trade regionals have a reasonable amount of character (well, their “Kona Blend” is in with the regionals, and probably only statistically contains a Kona bean in any given bag, but tastes pretty good anyway). Most of them are light of traditional espresso, but well in the bounds of my tastes.

    I’ve ordered a couple things from Volcania (largish specialty roaster outside of Atlanta, does a lot of mail order business) recently, and they have been full of character. I’m still working through a bag of their Tanzinian Peaberry roasted to the light end of medium that behaves like no other coffee I’ve ever worked with. Extremely vegetal and winy, almost like a nice vegetable stock superimposed with coffee, and dense in a way that requires an unusually coarse grind to get reasonable shot dynamics in an espresso machine. Not something I’d want all the time, but it is a neat experience.

    I have actually been looking for a classic Italian style blended espresso (dark roast, with a little Robusta in it) to play with, and found out a little roaster local to me has an interesting offering in that vein at $15/lb, I’m going to pick some up this weekend and see how it goes.

  • @BuckWylde@lemmy.world
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    12 years ago

    Here’s my flex: I work at a roastery so I haven’t paid for beans in years. My daily coffee is our Full Cycle blend from Nossa Familia in Portland OR.