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Coffee @kbin.social Anomander @kbin.social

What are your Top Three best roasters in your region?

Where are you located, and who are your go-to success roasters within the area?

What do you like about them - and are there any stand-out offerings you'd recommend?

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19 comments
  • I'm in NYC, so we're a bit spoiled. There's great coffee all around, but my personal favorites are Sey Coffee in Brooklyn and The Coffee Project, which is essentially a coffee professional development group for training and certification that also has an excellent roastery and several cafes.

    • I didn't know that Coffee Project did their own retail line as well; I thought their niche was providing roasting space/machine access to small startup roasters who couldn't own their own dedicated space.

      • Yeah, I've had some really great beans from them! They actually have a location literally across the street from my apartment, so they're my go-to source for beans and I go pretty frequently. I just had a Thailand typica from them that was really lovely and a passion fruit maceration that was funky as hell, but really fun.

  • I'm in Perth, Western Australia...

    Favourite roaster for my standard morning flat white is Leftfield. All their roasts are blends on the medium/dark side, but consistently high quality.

    (And... I just looked at their website for the first time in ages and see that they now have a whole bunch of single origins...)

    For coffee nerd stuff, I like community coffee and blacklist. Blacklist are a third wave coffee shop, they do a whole heap of single origin roasts and do pourovers, etc, in the cafe.

    • I've never heard of Leftfield or Blacklist; but Community Coffee is a name that's made it to my part of the world in the past - I recognize them at least.

      I think the darker end of mediums is a range of roasts that Specialty can tend to neglect, but where there's still enough space and variety for a roaster to express excellence and play with interesting coffees. I recall you posted latte shots earlier - you're mostly an espresso person?

      • Where are you? A different Australian state, or a different country? I'm surprised that anyone has heard of community coffee outside of WA.

        Yeah, I'm only recently an espresso person. Got a cafelat robot a year ago and am still learning lots. Used an aeropress for ages, but still do pourovers from time to time.

        it's an interesting observation that speciality coffee ignores darker roasts. I reckon there will be a revolt against light roasts soon as people start to explore what makes good dark roast.

        For example I only noticed this on the Leftfield website the other day. Haven't tried it yet.

        https://www.leftfieldcoffee.com/shop/kams-signature-roast-traditional-dark-roast

        Rich & satisfying, this is our fullest roast. It’s a gourmet take on traditional craft roasting, by hand and on manual equipment. After constant requests for something a little more old-school, Kam has chosen the densest beans that can take a higher roast degree. It’s not an easy style to do well, it takes a special touch but there are over two decades of craftsmanship behind this one. Enjoy…

  • I'm in Sacramento, California, USA and am a coffee roaster so I like my roastery. I don't know the rules about self promo here so I'll say around me (that aren't me) the best are Mast, Temple, and Camelia.

    Mast has the best coffee actually roasted in Sacramento if you brew your own, but the drinks in their cafes are always lackluster. Temple's drinks are on point but I feel like they haven't scaled well on the roasting side. Camelia has good coffee and I personally really like their packaging.

    • Mast has the best coffee actually roasted in Sacramento if you brew your own, but the drinks in their cafes are always lackluster. Temple’s drinks are on point but I feel like they haven’t scaled well on the roasting side.

      I think it's wild how this happens, and how (relatively) common it is. We have a few businesses in town here that fall into that same issue - either they roast really well and phone it in on drinks in cafe, or the cafe is excellent but the in-house roasting just doesn't meet the bar.

      Though the big nominee I would have had for that award shifted their roasting program last fall and now the coffee is kind of crummy in addition to lackluster drinks in-cafe.

      My absolute favourite case there is a company whose cafes do a phenomenal job of making their coffee taste normal, but take some home and those beans are consistently roasted like someone back at the factory is trying to craft bean-shaped satire of Specialty light roasts. It would be art if it was deliberate, but they're completely straight-faced and earnest that they roast the absolute best coffee in the city and anyone who doesn't agree is an uncultured boor who doesn't really like coffee. I wish I was kidding.

  • I'm in lower mainland BC, Canada; my go-to in the Vancouver region are Luna, House of Funk, and Pallet.

    Luna is an extraordinarily talented, relatively tiny, roaster run out of Langley region that specializes in very unusual, weird, or distinctive coffees. They do things that are an easy sell for the Specialty coffee person into the more out-there side of things and the combination of their sourcing talent and knowledge, and the talent and effort put into their roasting, has them consistently put out very high quality 'niche'-appeal lots, typically with short shelving time and fairly quick stock rotation.

    House of Funk is a brewery/roastery located in North Van that roasts a lot of 'funky' beans. The roasting isn't as innovative or technical as Luna, but their sourcing is very much focused on the weird and their lineup is consistently unusual and very interesting coffees. Unrelated to the coffee, their packaging design is IMO second to none, the coffee generally comes in a can with art on, and some of them are cool enough I keep them long after the contents are done.

    Pallet is wobbling furiously between "very accessible" and "very innovative" in a surprisingly graceful balancing act. They have a product line devoted to interesting third-wave coffees and unconventional processing or lots, they're the biggest and the most financially successful of the three and they do leverage that to buy absolutely fantastic greens and bizarre microlots on spec in a way that someone smaller might not be able to gamble on. At the same time they bring third-wave quality and attention to detail to roasting some very accessible, very "normal" coffees that are still excellent. This is my go-to when I'm trying to show 'normal' people what third-wave coffee can offer them.

  • I’m not a coffee expert so I’ve been trying various places near me in Seattle. So far Ladro, Victrola, and Storeyville seem lovely.

    • The other big OG that I'm familiar with from down there is Espresso Vivace, who make a really fantastic lineup of old-world style espressos with third-wave execution. The first cafe I ever worked at served them, I've loved their coffees since.

  • I'm in NW Oregon, with lots of great roasters in the area. But honestly, I've been home roasting so long that I feel like I have no idea what--if any--good new ones might be out there. So it's hard to say that my older favorites are really the best.

    With that caveat, Upper Left and Nossa Familia in Portland, and Relevant in Vancouver (WA) were my old favorites. Looks like they're all still there, so I'll put my vote in for those 3.

  • I'm near Marietta, GA. I go to Cool Beans. They have a storefront right on the rail where they get their coffee in giant burlap sacks (sent in from different countries of course). They roast in-house, so you really can't get more fresh than that.

19 comments