Brew a Cheaper Buzz with the Best Budget Coffee
By Cheapism.com
By Elizabeth Sheer, Cheapism.com
While
single-estate coffee beans and cold-brewed coffee may be all the rage in coffee
culture, frequenting your local hipster haunt gets expensive pretty quickly.
The alternative, of course, is brewing in the comfort of your own kitchen.
Whether you choose to grind the beans yourself or prefer the convenience of
pre-ground coffee, you can enjoy a high-quality cup o' joe without the lines or
the coffee shop markup.
We
invited a panel of tasters to sample some of the best-rated cheap coffees, each
bearing a price between 11 cents and 22 cents a cup.
Folgers Black
Silk is
the darkest roast in the brand's lineup. Online reviewers have noted that its
flavor is dark and rich without tasting burnt or bitter and that the coffee
taste comes through even after milk and sugar are added. Our tasting panel
agreed that Folgers has a "rich coffee aroma in the can" and tastes
"bold" and "strong, but not too strong." With the addition
of milk, the coffee "tasted smooth" and was "less acidic."
Without milk, our tasters said it left a "bitter" or
"chemical" "aftertaste that lingers." One taster said the
color was good. Folgers Black Silk is available in K-Cups, single-serving
packets, and canisters of pre-ground coffee. A 27.8-ounce canister starts at
$7.64.
Eight O'Clock
Original is a medium roast blend that's been around for more than 150
years. It was originally A&P supermarkets' store brand, but the mellow yet
full-bodied flavor has earned a reputation of its own. This is a very
middle-of-the-road coffee, which probably adds to its appeal, and online
reviews suggest it's best enjoyed black. Our tasters described an "initial
sweetness" and "medium acidity," and all agreed it left "no
aftertaste." With milk, though, they determined it was a bit too mild and
"not enough of the coffee taste comes through." Eight O'Clock
Original coffee starts at $4.98 for 12 ounces of whole beans.
Café Bustelo is a
dark-roasted, Cuban-style coffee that our panel decided had a "spicy
aroma" in the can. It's traditionally enjoyed in drinks heavy on the milk
and sugar, such as cafecito and café con leche, which may be the best way to
drink this coffee. When tasting it without milk, our panelists deemed it
"acrid" with a strong aftertaste; one taster said it was reminiscent
of "gas station coffee that's been sitting on a burner all day." Fans
of super-dark coffee might choose Café Bustelo for the bold flavor of a
coffeehouse drink with add-ins. A 10-ounce can starts at $3.79.
Melitta coffee is extra-finely
ground for use with the brand's manual, pour-over cones and paper filters but
can also be brewed in an automatic-drip coffee maker. We used the latter method
in our tasting, but the former may be preferable. At $5.99 for an 11-ounce can,
Melitta 100% Colombian is more expensive than some other budget coffees, but
less is required per cup, thanks to the finer grounds. Perhaps because our test
used the same measurement for Melitta as for other coffees, the panelists found
that it tasted "too strong" and "bitter" and showed a lot
of acidity, although with milk it had a taste that one panel member described
as "fruity." Another taster said it had a mild aroma. Using less per
cup is a money-saving strategy and may also be a path to enjoying this coffee,
because the brew would be less intense. Online reviewers said the smooth and
nutty flavors of the 100% Colombian brew appealed to them.
Dunkin' Donuts
Original Blend is proclaimed by its producer to be a premium coffee. And at
$8.99 a pound, it comes closer to a premium price than the others we tested.
Our tasters agreed it presents more of an "aroma than the others,"
calling it "very mild" and "smooth" and comparatively less
bitter. This was the winning coffee with our panelists because it tasted
"light" and "not acidic at all," and left no
"lingering aftertaste." Interestingly, online reviews for Dunkin'
Donuts coffee were more mixed than those for the competing brands in our test,
which confirms just how subjective taste is. Some online reviewers found the
lightness extremely pleasant and the taste mild and sweet. Others considered
the lightness the brand's downfall and termed it insipid.
Our
panel conducted a blind test, with the tasters unaware of the coffees they were
drinking. All habitually drink premium coffee, and the brands included in the
tasting were unfamiliar to them. The coffee came from freshly opened containers
and was prepared in a Mr. Coffee coffee maker. Each pot was made with 2
tablespoons of pre-ground coffee per cup of water and then transferred to a
thermal container to maintain a consistent level of heat. Each coffee was
tested with and without the addition of milk.
A note
about coffee: The longer coffee beans are roasted, the darker and bolder the
flavor. American coffee drinkers traditionally prefer lighter roasts but
recently have taken a liking to the darker, stronger brews common at Starbucks
and other coffeehouses. People who drink their coffee black may enjoy the
subtle flavors of a light roast, while more intense flavors may hold up better
in a coffee drink with added milk and sugar.
Aside
from roasting, much of the flavor of coffee comes from the type and quality of
the beans. Arabica beans are widely considered to have the best flavor but are
expensive due to the care needed to cultivate them. The Eight O'Clock, Melitta,
and Dunkin' Donuts coffees discussed above use only arabica beans. Many of the
cheapest coffees use robusta beans, which are easier to grow and contain more
caffeine.
For the
best flavor and freshest brew, experts recommend grinding whole coffee beans
just before brewing. A cheap coffee grinder may cost extra, but it's
an effective way to elevate a common cup of coffee and approximate that premium
taste.
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