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What style coffee do you prefer? How often do you drink it?

As to the second: daily, more or less.

Personally I prefer a good dark roast, and if it's a good blend (also for medium or light roast) I want it black.

Outside of dedicated coffeehouses though, most coffee out & about isn't what I consider "good" (I guess I'm a snob?:-P), so I usually add sugar & creamer.

(Pro-Tip: combine black coffee with a pastry for the ultimate snack, i.e. the sugar doesn't need to be poured directly into the liquid! The juxtaposition of the bitter and sweet really works well.:-)

I can't stand Starbucks coffee regardless though, so if needed I'll get a mocha. I'd sooner trust a McDonald's coffee though - seriously: b/c Lavazza is great!

It's such a personal choice though - what do you like?

51 comments
  • None. Never got a taste for coffee and some (Starbucks) the smell alone actually nauseates me.

    I will say, I'm in the camp of "I'll try anything once!" and while taking my wife to a Dutch Brothers saw they had something called "White Coffee" which I had never heard of.

    https://www.dutchbros.com/news-events/what-is-white-coffee

    It wasn't awful. I mean, it's still not something I would drink voluntarily, but as an experiment? It didn't feel like I had to choke it down or anything.

    • I visited Seattle and had a FANTASTIC Italian coffee there. Also Seattle's Best - another coffee shop that originated from Seattle - is kinda good. A ton of people (especially those from Seattle, it seems:-D) criticize Starbucks for (INTENTIONALLY!) offering its "burnt" style of coffee... and I agree:-). Though tastes are personal so if someone likes that, then that's great, but yeah I really do not. :-P

      There are many other things to enjoy doing in the world, besides coffee.

  • I don't drink much coffee but we have a nice expresso machine. Mostly black, sometimes milk and a sweetener.

    Lavazza Crema e Gusto Classico or Tradizione beans are cheap on sale and I like it over any Dutch supermarket brands. We vary with Illy Classico, Intenso, Brasile beans.

    For fresh roasts we need to drive to Maastricht...we don't do that often, but it's much nicer than all of the above.

    • It's hard to beat the freshest coffee - though I wonder how climate change is going to impact that, and it's always been difficult to attain "consistency" in single-origin material.

  • I make hot chocolate a healthy scoop instant expresso. I've never liked pure coffee, but I like being awake sometimes.

    • I always used to think that way - until I got out in the world more and tried stuff until eventually I found stuff that I LOVED. You might have already tried and it just does not work for you, I'm just saying that there is a LOT of bad coffee out there masquerading as something that is worth paying even tiny amounts of money for:-).

      • That's what I've heard. One day I'll have to give it an honest try outside of, like, Dunkin Donuts or the gas station 😅

  • Since I have to do without caffeine, I drink coffee for the pleasure of it.

    I don't really do any fancy brewing, just my one cup drip maker I got decades ago.

    But I buy good beans, store them properly, and only grind in small batches.

    Right now, I'm using an Ethiopian bean, dark roast. I take that with milk and a tiny bit of sugar. It takes the bitter down a notch, so you get all that earthy depth.

    My favorite coffee overall is Jamaican blue mountain. And there is decaf of it available, though I lost the bookmark for the company. That I take black with just a hint of sugar. Normally, milk or cream mutes the bitterness of a coffee and lets you enjoy the other flavors, but blue mountain is so delicate and unbitter that it's better without. The sugar is just there to lift the floral aspects above the rest.

    And that's really how I do coffee. I find one I like, fiddle with the additives until I get the best results for my tongue, and that's that.

    Roast wise, I don't have a preference. I find that the roast matching the bean is way more important than a specific roast. Something like blue mountain taken to a dark roast is a waste of very expensive beans. You lose everything that makes it unique. Something like a kona can go pretty dark before that happens. And I find that robusto takes a dark roast better, and benefits from it, more than arabica regardless of region. The other varieties take dark roasting poorly, imo.

51 comments