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In this episode, I'm talking about something that changed the way I enjoy coffee forever: the lifespan of a roasted bean. For years, I drank my coffee a couple of days after roast because it felt right, and I even told other people to do the same. Everything online tells you to drink it as fresh as possible. But the more I experimented, the more I realized that fresh doesn't always mean best. I pushed my rest time from one week to two, then three, and now I'm comfortably drinking coffee four weeks off roast, and the cup keeps telling me I was missing out all those years.
I walk through a Colombian coffee I had recently that peaked beautifully around three and a half weeks off roast, and I share what happened when it started to fade around the five to six week mark. I talk about the small brewing adjustments I made, like tightening my ratio from 1:15 to 1:12 to 1:10, to squeeze a little more life out of the beans as they changed. By the end of this episode, you'll understand why paying attention to the rest window matters, how to recognize when your coffee is peaking versus dying, and how to journal your way through a bag so you're a smarter, more appreciative drinker by the time you open the next one.
Support the show
For good tasty coffee, check us out at: everydaybeans.com
For tips, tricks and still trying to figure it out: https://www.youtube.com/@everyday-beans
By Oaks, the coffee guySend us Fan Mail
In this episode, I'm talking about something that changed the way I enjoy coffee forever: the lifespan of a roasted bean. For years, I drank my coffee a couple of days after roast because it felt right, and I even told other people to do the same. Everything online tells you to drink it as fresh as possible. But the more I experimented, the more I realized that fresh doesn't always mean best. I pushed my rest time from one week to two, then three, and now I'm comfortably drinking coffee four weeks off roast, and the cup keeps telling me I was missing out all those years.
I walk through a Colombian coffee I had recently that peaked beautifully around three and a half weeks off roast, and I share what happened when it started to fade around the five to six week mark. I talk about the small brewing adjustments I made, like tightening my ratio from 1:15 to 1:12 to 1:10, to squeeze a little more life out of the beans as they changed. By the end of this episode, you'll understand why paying attention to the rest window matters, how to recognize when your coffee is peaking versus dying, and how to journal your way through a bag so you're a smarter, more appreciative drinker by the time you open the next one.
Support the show
For good tasty coffee, check us out at: everydaybeans.com
For tips, tricks and still trying to figure it out: https://www.youtube.com/@everyday-beans