Consumer Reports Picks the Best Cup o' Brew
Our top-rated Colombian coffee is also a CR Best Buy
By ConsumerReports.org
Folgers, Maxwell House, and Starbucks are America's best-selling ground coffees. But all three were iced by Eight O'Clock Colombian coffee in our taste tests. As for Starbucks, it didn't even place among the top regular coffees and trailed among decafs.
Our tests of 19 coffees also show that some of the best cost the least. At about $6 per pound, Eight O'Clock costs less than half the price of Gloria Jean's, Peet's, and other more expensive brands.
Like your joe without all the caffeine? Dunkin' Donuts and Millstone were the front runners among the decafs. But Folgers Gourmet Selection Lively Colombian came in close behind and costs up to $3 less per pound. But even the best decaffeinated coffees couldn't match the best regular brews in our taste tests.
What we tasted
Our coffee experts focused on 100 percent Colombian — a best-selling bean — for regular coffee. Most of our decaffeinated coffees are a blend of different beans.
What makes a great cup of Colombian? Lots of aroma and flavor, some floral notes and fruitiness, a touch of bitterness, and enough body to provide a feeling of fullness in the mouth. Woody, papery, or burnt tastes are off-notes.
Weeks of sipping and swirling confirmed that even 100 percent Colombian coffee and its Juan Valdez logo don't guarantee quality. Our trained testers unearthed other surprises:
Still so-so after all these years
Chock full o'Nuts and Maxwell House have pushed coffee that's "heavenly" and "good to the last drop" since 1932 and 1907, respectively. But off-notes, little complexity, and, for Chock full o' Nuts, variable quality put both behind Eight O'Clock.
When boutique isn't better
Midwest-based Caribou and Kickapoo beat an array of larger players among regular coffees. But Bucks County Coffee, from Langhorne, Penn., tasted only OK, and Peet's, from Berkeley, Calif., was burnt and bitter, despite costing $14 per pound. Peet's, Archer Farms, and Kickapoo also varied from batch to batch.
Caffeine differences
None of our decaffeinated coffees had more than 5 milligrams of caffeine per 6-ounce serving. But among regular coffees, Caribou and Bucks County had roughly four times the caffeine (195 milligrams) of some of the lowest-level brews. Medical experts say up to 600 milligrams per day is probably safe for most and can help keep you alert. But heart patients and women who are pregnant or nursing should stay below 200 milligrams, which might mean sidestepping those brands among the caffeinated coffees we tested.
How to choose
Several of our top coffees could save you $25 to $70 per year over pricier brands even if you drank just one 6-ounce cup per day. Here's what else to think about:
Consider how you take it
Coffees judged very good taste fine black. Milk and sugar can improve a mediocre coffee, but not even cream is likely to help the lowest-scoring decafs.
Choose a good coffeemaker
The best coffeemakers from our January report reached the 195º to 205º F required to get the best from the beans and avoid a weak or bitter brew. A top Michael Graves model costs just $40.
Consider grinding for fresher flavor
Even the best pre-ground coffee can't beat the best fresh-ground when it comes to taste. One top grinder from our January report, the Mr. Coffee IDS77, costs only $20.
Thursday, February 5, 2009
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6 comments:
Hmmm...is somebody in danger of becoming a "coffee snob?"
Nothing wrong with that!
In the words of Edward Abbey, "Our culture runs on coffee and gasoline, the first often tasting like the second."
Thankfully, a little education and a wide array of choices (beyond the plain-jane of Folgers or the "99 octane" of Starbucks), can garner one a beverage that not only energizes, but also entices the senses!
Flavorful and aromatic does not have to mean strong, and one person's preference is bound to make someone else's toes curl! As Abraham Lincoln once said, "If this is coffee, please bring me some tea; but if this is tea, please bring me some coffee."
"Good coffee is a benefit, but great coffee is a reward and the difference between the two is pennies a day." Someone else said that, but I can't remember who. True, though.
Lastly, "Coffee is good for talent, but genius wants prayer," as R.W. Emerson once said, reminding us that even though coffee is beneficial, in moderation, it's not everything!
So, today I picked up a bag of 8 O'Clock Columbian Coffee. I am looking forward to trying it out with its high ratings and all. I'm sure it's gonna be better than my daily cup of Folgers.
Just to let ya'll know, I don't only drink coffee. No, I also drink tea. In fact right now I'm sipping a cup of camomile tea with honey and milk and unwinding for the night. Some serious tea drinkers would surely reprove me and request I be more accurate by calling the herbal tea "tisane". But if I used that term, most of my readers might not know what the heck I was drinking (including me for the most part)!
I should mention that having a Senseo makes all the difference when making a fresh brewed cup of coffee with its froth on top. I can usually drink it black with this little device. But on occasion, when I pick up a bad can of coffee (can you say cheap? on sale?) then it needs a little something more. I found out a wonderful way to improve a can of old coffee that was on the verge of being tossed out...I simply added a small can of espresso grounds to the batch and gave it a good shake. You know, that ended up being some of the best coffee I have had in quite some time! Amazing what a little extra intensity can do to remedy the situation. (Thought I'd pass that tidbit on to you, my dear readers, in the event you ever need to salvage a can of grounds.)
So, any verdict on the 8 O'Clock Columbian Coffee?
Oh yeah, about that Eight O'Clock Columbian coffee...
Honestly, I wasn't that thrilled about this award winner. I thought it was bitter. I think that I found out I'm an Arabica drinker and not Columbian. Next I shall have to buy the Eight O'Clock Arabica and see if that changes my opinion about this particular brand. Meanwhile, I have to justify the expense of another "experiment" by finishing up the stuff I've got. So bear with me awhile.
Coffees I've tried that I did like were Starbuck's French Roast Extra Bold (Dark Roast Blend) and Stop & Shop's Simply Enjoy brand Honduraa (San Marcos Estate) Light Roast. And of course, in my previous posting, the espresso added "fix" to that can of nasty grounds - that ended up being pretty good stuff too once the repairs were made with my inventive "house blend"!
In your last post regarding 8 O'Clock Columbian, you said:
"...Meanwhile, I have to justify the expense of another "experiment" by finishing up the stuff I've got. So bear with me awhile..."
Boy, it's taking a really long time to finish up that can o'coffee!
Joking of course! I'm sure it's long-gone...but it would be interesting to hear where your coffee sensibilities have went since!
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