Thoughts on supermarket single origin coffee

Thoughts on supermarket single origin coffee

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Toronto’s Pilot Coffee Roasters Acquiring Bridgehead Coffee for $3.6 Million

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Brewing at Home and on the Road with Justin Pierce

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U.S. Coffee Championships 2023 Baltimore Qualifiers Results

More than 100 competitors brought their talent to Baltimore to take part in six competitions, and 63 will progress to nationals in April. BY NATE KLOCKBARISTA MAGAZINE ONLINE Photos by Matthew Temple courtesy of the U.S. Coffee Championships Last weekend, my hometown welcomed the U.S. Coffee Championships (USCC) qualifiers with the charm only Baltimore could […]

Thoughts on supermarket single origin coffee

5 Cool Cafés Worth a Try in Chiang Mai

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10 Minutes With Keith Hawkins of the Color of Coffee Collective

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The First Women-Only Coffee Championships Held in Costa Rica

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Ethos Agriculture’s Journey from Vision to Impact in Coffee Sustainability: Part Two

In the second half of this article, we discover how the Coffee Barometer attempts to bridge the gap between discourse and action, envisioning a sustainable future for the coffee sector. BY VASILEIA FANARIOTISENIOR ONLINE CORRESPONDENT Featured photo courtesy of Rodrigo Flores via Unsplash As we embark on the second part of our conversation with Ethos […]

Thoughts on supermarket single origin coffee

Thoughts on supermarket single origin coffee

Thoughts on supermarket single origin coffee

minimum dose size?

I use the Hario switch to brew my coffee and am trying to reduce my caffeine consumption. Hence I would like to brew smaller cups of coffee. I am currently using 10g of coffee with 160g of water. (1:16 Ratio) I am wondering if there is a minimum amount of coffee...

Thoughts on supermarket single origin coffee

Ever since I started enjoying quality coffee, I am reading the labels on coffee bags much more carefully, and I only now realised that in better supermarkets, you can actually buy something resembling speciality! Sure, shelves are usually dominated by cheap, pre-ground blends. But I can often also find of bags of fairtrade, whole bean, single origin, lightly roasted coffees from somwhere else than Brazil ([like this, for example](https://www.locallybest.co.uk/product/co-op-irresistible-single-origin-kenya-fairtrade-coffee-beans-227g/)).

Now, I understand they are not quite to standard set by reputable rosters. No date of roasting, suspiciously low price, and "kenyan" or "columbian" can hardly be called single origin. Still, I am sometimes tempted to try it, expecially if I have just run out of beans. And lower price is also a tempting factor, especially in this day and age.

Do you have any experience with such "not-speciality-but-trying" coffees? Are they genuinely trying to offer high(er) quality that usually (not always!) comes with single origin label, or is it just a marketing trick to sell average coffee to more demanding customers?

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