Coffee Reviews

Google
  Web ConsumerSearch.com   
Reviewing the Reviews Home Category Index Shop Newsletter Search About Us

Coffee Reviews

Updated February 2008

Best Coffee Reviews: (out of 18)
Cook’s Illustrated, Cook’s Illustrated, Consumer Reports

Best Coffee: (out of 40)
Eight O’Clock Coffee 100% Colombian, Dunkin’ Donuts Original Blend, Millstone Colombian Supremo

Fast Answers - Best Coffee
Top Rated What the Research Says
•  Eight O’Clock Coffee 100% Colombian
   (*est. $5 for a 12-ounce bag)

>> Where to buy

Top supermarket whole-bean coffee.

In blind taste tests, Eight O'Clock 100% Colombian is praised for its smooth, bold flavor. Tasters appreciate its toasty aroma and nuttiness. It's neither too dark nor too light, with good body, especially considering its low price. Eight O'Clock uses 100% Arabica beans, which are considered more flavorful than cheaper Robusta beans used in most supermarket coffee. However, one review comments that the taste can vary from batch to batch.
•  Dunkin’ Donuts Original Blend
   (*est. $8 per pound)

>> Where to buy

Best ground coffee.

If you like your coffee on the lighter side, Dunkin' Donuts pre-ground 100% Arabica coffee gets good scores from coffee drinkers for its smooth, "classic" taste. We did read some reports that Dunkin' Donuts coffee can vary from batch to batch, but among ground coffee, it scores much higher than other supermarket brands like Folgers and Maxwell House. Today Show food editor Phil Lempert prefers Dunkin' Donuts coffee to Starbucks pre-ground coffee, which Lempert and others find to be too bitter.
•  Millstone Colombian Supremo
   (*est. $7.50 for an 11-ounce bag)

>> Where to buy

Best dark roast coffee.

In blind taste tests, coffee drinkers generally find dark roast Starbucks coffee to be too bitter. Rather, we found better endorsements overall for Millstone Columbian Supremo. Although still considered a dark roast coffee, Millstone is considered smoother and better balanced without the bitterness that's common of many French roast and dark roast supermarket coffees. (compare prices)
•  Great Value 100% Columbian Decaf (Wal-Mart)
   (*est. $2.50 per pound, ground)

>> Where to buy

Supermarket decaf coffee.

We didn't find many reviews or taste tests of decaffeinated coffee, but Wal-Mart's Great Value house brand gets solid scores for value and taste in one major comparison test, along with a smattering of user reviews. We also found decent scores for Eight O'Clock 100% Columbian decaf (*est. $5 per 12-ounce bag of whole beans), which costs a bit more, but is said to taste as good or better as some regular coffee.
•  Green Mountain Coffee Roasters Organic Ethiopian Yirgacheffe
   (*est. $9 for a 12-ounce bag)

>> Where to buy

Fair Trade coffee.

Certified Fair Trade coffee complies with guidelines set forth by U.S. and international organizations committed to advocating living wages, sustainable agriculture and democratically run farms. While there are many small roasters specializing in Fair Trade and/or organic coffee (organic coffee is grown without the use of chemicals), few are available nationally in supermarkets. Green Mountain Roasters is easier to find than most, and its Fair Trade organic Yirgacheffe coffee wins taste tastes for its depth and balance. This is a medium-bodied coffee available as whole beans or pre-ground. (compare prices)
>>  Comparison Chart

Full Story
What the experts say, our analysis, and more...
Updated February 2008

Blind taste tests are the basis for the most credible taste tests of supermarket coffee. The best reviewers, including Consumer Reports and Cook's Illustrated magazines, take pains to prepare coffee the exact same way with each coffee -- grinding the beans in the same grinder and brewing coffee using the same coffee maker, with the same water.

Consumer Reports tests the largest sampling of nationally available coffee varieties, including 42 regular, decaf, whole-bean and ground coffees. However, only two taste testers contributed to the ratings. Cook's Illustrated doesn't test nearly as many coffee varieties (eight whole-bean coffees plus eight pre-ground supermarket coffees), but 25 taste testers are used. Furthermore, Cook's Illustrated tasted whole-bean coffees black, but also with added milk.

We found several reviewers that treat coffee like wine, adding tasting notes referring to a coffee's smokiness and citrus notes. One such expert is Kenneth Davids; author, consultant and co-founder of CoffeeReview.com, Davids conducts two separate review-roundups in search of the best supermarket coffee brands. These reviews are clearly aimed at coffee aficionados, and the opinions are those of just one or two expert testers rather than a larger group of coffee drinkers, but the reviews are balanced and critical.

As you might expect, not all reviewers liked the same coffee, and sometimes, different varieties within a brand achieved different ratings. Consumer Reports found that high-priced coffee wasn't necessarily favored by taste testers. Expensive Kona coffee (from the Big Island of Hawaii) didn't rate as well as many non-Kona coffee varieties. Another common thread in reviews was a mixed response for Starbucks coffee (now available as beans or pre-ground in supermarkets). Whole-bean Starbucks coffee (*est. $10 for a 12-ounce bag) generally finishes higher in taste tests than pre-ground Starbucks coffee (*est. $10 per pound). At Cook's Illustrated, testers liked Starbucks Original Roast whole-bean coffee. Several testers liked its chocolaty flavor and smokiness, but others found it to taste burnt. The pre-ground Starbucks coffee, however, did far worse in tests at Cook's Illustrated and elsewhere. At Cook's, testers found it to have a ''burnt plastic flavor,'' and that it ''smells like a forest fire.''

At the other end of the price spectrum, the best-selling coffee in the U.S. is Folgers (*est. $4 per pound) . However, Folgers wasn't a standout in tests. Cook's Illustrated's tasting panel found it to be ''bursting with charcoal flavors, and nothing else.'' In Kenneth Davids' test of 40 supermarket coffee varieties, Folgers finishes at the bottom of the pack, flanked by Starbucks and Maxwell House (*est. $4 per pound). Folgers is called "at best nutty, midtoned, rather monotoned" by Davids.

Eight O'Clock coffee (*est. $5 for a 12-ounce bag) is another coffee that gets mixed results, and like Starbucks coffee, the scores for whole-bean Eight O'Clock coffee are much better than ratings for its pre-ground coffee. But even the bean version polarizes experts. While Eight O'Clock is one of only two coffees rated “very good” by the two Consumer Reports testers, Eight O'Clock Original finishes dead last in the opinion of Kenneth Davids. Similarly, Chock full o'Nuts (*est. $4 for 12-ounce bag) is the least favorite whole-bean coffee (out of eight tested) at Cook's Illustrated -- but the same publication also judged Chock full o'Nuts pre-ground coffee to be the "least offensive" among eight brands, including Starbucks and Folgers.

The conflicting results aren't too much of a surprise; every office seems to be as full of Starbucks fans as detractors. And as with most foods and beverages, your own taste buds make the ultimate call. For our report, we've worked to identify those coffee brands that usually rise above others in taste tests. Many specialty, small producers and regional coffee brands aren't included in this report. It's worth trying locally roasted brands, which in many articles are said to taste better overall than any national-brand coffee.  ... Continued

Consensus Report

Our Consensus Report shows how many times products are top-ranked by reviewers included in our
All The Reviews Reviewed chart.

# of picks Model (with retailer links) Details from Amazon.com
4 Millstone Colombian Supremo (*est. $7.50 for an 11-ounce bag) details
4 Dunkin’ Donuts Original Blend (*est. $8 per pound) details
3 Peet’s Major Dickason (*est. $13 per pound) -
3 Maxwell House (*est. $4 per pound) -
3 Eight O’Clock Coffee 100% Columbian (*est. $5 for a 12-ounce bag) -
3 Green Mountain Organic Ethiopian Yirgacheffe (*est. $9 for a 12-ounce bag) -
2 Caribou Coffee (*est. $13 for a 16-ounce bag) -
2 Starbucks Coffee House Blend (*est. $10 for a 12-ounce bag) -
1 each Chock full o’Nuts French Roast, , Great Value 100% Colombian Decaf (Wal-Mart), Eight O'Clock 100% Columbian Decaf

Strangely enough, the brand that comes up in almost every review we read was Starbucks coffee, even though it is only mentioned as a top choice alongside Millstone’s Colombian Supremo in one review.

Advertisement
Coffee Reviews