Coffee Beans
Species, origin, roast level, and freshness — how to choose beans that match your brew and taste.
The bean is where your cup begins. Two species dominate: arabica, prized for sweetness and complexity, and robusta, which is more bitter, higher in caffeine, and often used for crema and instant coffee. From there, origin, roast level, and freshness shape everything you taste.
These guides help you read a bag of coffee like a pro — decoding roast dates, origin labels, and processing — so you buy beans that suit how you brew.
6 articles in “Coffee Beans”

How to Choose Coffee Beans: A Simple Buyer’s Guide
Roast date, roast level, origin, and processing decide how your coffee tastes — more than the brand. Here is how to read a bag of beans and pick the right one for how you brew.

Best Coffee Beans for Pour Over: What to Look For
Pour over rewards bright, light-to-medium roast single origins that show off clarity and acidity. Here is how to choose beans that make the most of a V60, Chemex, or Kalita.

Best Coffee Beans for Cold Brew: Smooth, Bold & Low-Acid
Cold brew is best with medium-to-dark roast beans that give it chocolatey, low-acid body. Here is how to pick beans for a smooth batch — and why light roast usually falls flat cold.

Arabica vs Robusta: The Two Coffee Species Explained
Arabica tastes sweeter and more complex; Robusta is stronger, more bitter, and has nearly double the caffeine. Here is how the two species differ and when each one is the right choice.

Coffee Roast Levels Explained: Light, Medium & Dark
Light roast is bright and acidic, dark roast is bold and smoky, and medium sits in between. Here is what each roast level tastes like, how caffeine really compares, and which to pick.

Single Origin vs Blend: Which Coffee Should You Buy?
Single origin shows off one place’s distinct character; a blend is built for balance and consistency. Here is how they differ and which to choose for your taste and brew method.