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Gifting Coffee Beans: 3 Things To Do (And 3 To Avoid)
Written by: Garrett Oden
Coffee beans make exceptional gifts, but not all beans are created equal. There's actually a wrong way to give coffee as a gift.
(But clever marketing tricks keep that from being realized for most people).
Let's explore how to find the best coffee bean gifts for your loved one, whether they're a casual fan or a super-enthusiast, including:
- What coffee beans you absolutely want to avoid
- 3 must-follow rules of coffee gift giving
- My #1 recommendation for the best coffee bean gift this year
We're about to turn a simple bag of coffee into a thoughtful gift that'll show your special person just how carefully you've picked out their beans.
Read:Â How To Put Together The Perfect Coffee Gift Basket
Up First: Not All Coffee Is Created Equally
Contrary to common belief, coffee is never just coffee.
- Thereâs well-grown and thereâs neglected coffee
- Thereâs stale and thereâs fresh coffee
- Thereâs coffee thatâs roasted with precision and thereâs coffee thatâs burned to a crisp
These things make a major difference in the final quality of the brewed coffee.
Low-end, poorly roasted coffee is bitter, dull and boring. Carefully grown, well roasted coffee is vibrant with rich flavors and aromas like blueberries, spice, rose, and beyond.
And itâs fantastic.
Thatâs the kind of coffee you want to give someone as a gift. The dull, bitter stuff? Leave those on the shelvesâŚ
Read: 3 Reasons Buying Cheap Coffee Is Bad For The World
Hereâs what you need to do to find these specialty-grade beans that'll rock the taste buds off of your lucky gift recipient.
Gift Rule #1: Aim To Maximize Freshness
The giant coffee sellers donât want you to know this, but coffee begins to go stale after just 2-3 weeks of being roasted. The lively aromas evaporate, the crisp acids become bitter, and pleasant flavors fall apart.
Freshly roasted beans have no rival - theyâre the epitome of what coffee can be, and the (obviously) make the most delicious coffee gifts.
- Look for this: Buy your beans from a coffee company that is transparent about when the coffee is roasted. The best case scenario is that the company roasts and ships out coffee to order. For example, at JavaPresse, we ship out coffee beans just two hours after they're roasted to preserve max freshness.
- Avoid this:Â Those âbest byâ dates on coffee bags are always way too far in the future, which is quite deceptive. Transparent roasters use the âroasted onâ date instead of âbest byâ, because they prioritize freshness and honesty.
Whether you buy beans from a local roaster or shop online, aim to maximize freshness and get your beans to the giftee as quickly as possible.
Read: Why Fresh Coffee Is The Best Coffee
Gift Rule #2: Find A Specialty Roaster
Donât just go with any coffee roaster, even if their beans are freshly roasted (even the worst roasters in the world can sell freshly roasted beans).
You want to find a roaster thatâs quality-focused, whoâs fascinated by nuance flavors in coffee. This means youâre skipping Folgerâs, of course, but it also means no bags with big, green logos.
You can often tell a specialty coffee roaster by the way they package their coffee beans. Here are a few things to look for:
- âRoasted Onâ dates. Like I said, this shows transparency. Bad roasters donât really do this because it makes it harder to sell older beans. Quality-focused roasters only want you to enjoy their coffee when itâs super fresh.
- Tasting notes. If the bag says mundane the coffee tastes like âchocolate, nuts, and citrusâ, you may want to stay away. Thatâs the most generic tasting profile ever. If a roaster gets more specific and exotic (âvanilla, caramel, and tangerineâ), youâre on the right track.
- Origin transparency. Roasters who buy low-grade beans donât like to get specific about where they buy their beans. They want to keep their sources a secret. Specialty roasters, on the other hand, celebrate their partner farms (because the coffeeâs so delicious).
Read:Â 12 Gifts For The Coffee Connoisseur
In the end, specialty coffee roasters just look and sound different.
The easiest thing to look for is a powerfully obvious passion for their beans.
Gift Rule #3:Â Check For Sustainable Sourcing
Donât gift beans that come from questionable sources. If the giftee knows you found beans that were sourced sustainably and ethically theyâll feel more proud of the gift.
This means you read up on the companies you buy from.
- Do they pay a fair and empowering price for the beans?
- Do they source from environmentally conscious farms?
- Are they transparent about where their coffee comes from?
If the answers to these questions canât easily be found on the website, something may be fishy.
Read: Fair Trade VS Direct Trade Coffee: Which Is Better For Coffee Sustainability?
Specialty coffee companies love to share how their work is creating a better world.
That often means transparent pricing, partnering with farms awarded for ethical practices, and bringing the consumer (thatâs you and me) into the passion.
Keep an eye out for coffee companies that are fighting the unsustainable status quo. Buy coffee from them.
Big No-No's: Whatever You Do, Avoid These
Like I said, there is a wrong way to buy coffee. But most of us arenât aware of that because the big corporate coffee players are really good at making us think otherwise.
Here are some things you definitely donât want to do.
- Donât buy beans from the supermarket. Sadly, grocery stores have an awful reputation for not caring about coffee freshness. Those bags are often weeks or months past-roast, which means the beans inside are not even close to fresh, no matter what the âbest byâ date says.
- Avoid buying beans weeks in advance. I get it. I like to plan ahead too. But even though you bought fresh beans, youâll be giving stale beans. Instead, buy a bag just a couple days before the gifting - or buy a bag the same day and give the giftee a receipt saying their uber-fresh coffee will be there soon.
- Pre-ground? Yuck. Whole beans have 2-3 weeks of peak freshness. Pre-ground coffee only has 30 minutes. If your giftee doesnât have a grinder for whole bean coffee, manual coffee grinders are very affordable and also make great gifts.
Here's Where to Find the Freshest Coffee Out There for an A+ Gift
I have a feeling your gift is going to be the favorite this year.
Youâve done the research, you know what to look for, and nowâs the fun part:
Choosing a great company to buy from.
In our JavaPresse Coffee Gift Subscription, we ship coffee beans within TWO HOURS of roasting to make sure coffee lovers get their beans at peak freshness and flavor. That's way faster than most companies can ship (many will even try to sell you old beans from a couple of weeks ago!).
But our coffees aren't just hyper-fresh... they're also sustainably sourced, roasted with craftsmanship, and are connoisseur-approved.