Light roasts leaving bitter, smoky aftertaste

Understanding the Process: Carbonic Maceration

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How to roast anaerobically fermented coffee

Among the many different kinds of experimental processing methods, anaerobic fermentation is perhaps the most popular and intriguing. Interest in this processing technique is only growing, with more and more anaerobic fermented coffee available in cafés and roasteries around the world. Moreover, of all the advanced processing methods, this particular technique has one of the […]


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…


Brewing at Home and On the Road with Darrin Daniel

We check in with the Cup of Excellence executive director to learn his current coffee-brewing habits. BY TANYA NANETTISENIOR ONLINE CORRESPONDENT Featured photo by Emre via Unsplash Brewing coffee is, for many coffee professionals, more than just a job.   They usually brew coffee every day, both for themselves and their customers. Perhaps they do it […]

Light roasts leaving bitter, smoky aftertaste

Light roasts leaving bitter, smoky aftertaste

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...

Light roasts leaving bitter, smoky aftertaste

After 10 or so years of drinking mostly black instant coffee (Nescafe), I quickly fell in love with sweet, plesantly acidic tastes that lightly roasted specialty coffeess have to offer. For a few months, I had a fantastic time – no more harsh bitterness, no more mouth-drying aftertaste, no more need to add sugar.

However, I have been noticing more and more that even lightly roasted coffees often leave a harsh aftertaste – resembling a taste of flame-charred food, or a traditional turkish-style coffee. Now, I don't mind it all that much, because the coffee itself is usually very good. But it does make me wonder if such an aftertaste is normal – or am I doing something wrong?

I brew either with a french press or the clever dripper with a paper filter. This aftertaste is present with both methods, so I don't think filtration is the issue. Could it be a "feature" of immersion brewing? I don't have a pourover cone so I can't easily test that.

On the other hand, I could be making a fuss for no reason. After all, even lightly roasted coffee was still roasted, and one should expect some roasty flavours in the cup. Maybe I am just noticing them more, after getting used to less bitter cups.

Any idea which one is it? Am I missing something or just overthinking?

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