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Best Coffee
Consumer Reports – No stand out cup of coffee after tests
of 37 blended varieties
Starbucks and Green Mountain Blends Perk the Top of
Ratings

YONKERS, N.Y.—Coffee lovers seeking a standout cup of
blended coffee may have a hard time. None of the 37 caffeinated and
decaffeinated varieties tested by Consumer Reports coffee experts earned an
Excellent or Very Good rating.
However, java lovers can still find at least a few Good
cups of coffee. Starbucks House Blend and Green Mountain Signature Nantucket
Blend Medium Roast perked to the top of the 14 caffeinated blends that earned a
Good rating from Consumer Reports.
At 26 and 23 cents per cup respectively, both the Starbucks
House Blend and Green Mountain Signature Nantucket Blend Medium Roast offer a
good combination of taste and price. Both have an earthy, woody taste, but
Starbucks was found to be a fairly bitter to very bitter darker roast, while the
Green Mountain has green/sharp flavor.
There’s slightly better news for decaf drinkers. Although
none of the 13 decaf blends Consumer tested scored higher than Good, several
performed at least as well as their caffeinated brand mates, which is quite a
feat, because the decaffeination process can harm flavor. Allegro Organic Decaf
Blend Medium Dark, Peet’s Decaf House Blend, Caribou Daybreak Coffee Morning
Blend Decaf, and Bucks County Decaf Breakfast Blend were among the better
scoring varieties.
Blends, the best-selling type of ground coffee, contain
beans from at least two regions or countries All coffees consist of arabica or
robusta beans, or a combination. Arabica beans are more expensive and tend to
make better coffee. So perhaps it’s not surprising that blended coffees scored
lower than several 100 percent Colombian arabica caffeinated brands tested by
Consumer Reports in March 2009.
In rating coffee, Consumer Reports experts look for
smoothness and complexity, with no off-flavors. The beans should be neither
under-roasted nor charred, and the brew should have at least moderate roma and
flavor, and subtle top notes. Some sourness and bitterness are desirable, too,
to keep the coffee from tasting bland. For a rundown of terms and further
explanation of how Consumer Reports tests coffee visit
www.ConsumerReports.org
CONSUMER REPORTS ADVICE: Coffee drinkers should look for
the best combination of taste and price. Don’t count on familiar brand names or
expensive price tags. Some coffees from revered companies like Maxwell House and
Folgers and languish near the bottom of Consumer Reports Ratings.
The package price doesn’t accurately reflect the cost per
cup because the density of the grind varies and manufacturers recommend using
different amounts of coffee for a given amount of water. Consumer Reports
calculated that caffeinated Green Mountain Signature Nantucket Blend Medium
Roast ($11.21 a pound) costs 23 cents per cup, while the Archer Farms Breakfast
Blend Decaf ($9.05 a pound) costs 34 cents per cup. The average coffee drinker
consumes 3.3 cups a day, or about 1,200 cups a year, so those pennies can add
up.
For coffee drinkers on a budget looking for a Good cup,
Consumer Reports recommends Melitta Classic Blend Road (11 cents per
cup) and Seattle’s Best Breakfast Blend (15 cents per cup). Decaf drinkers on a
budget should consider should consider Seattle’s Best Blend Decaf Light Roast
(15 cents per cup) or Sam’s Choice Organic Blend Decaffeinated Medium Roast (18
cents per cup).
To find out how your morning cup of blended roast coffee
stacks up, check out the complete ratings on all 37 varieties tested by Consumer
Reports available in the March Issue of Consumer Reports, on newsstands Feburary
2, 2010 or by visiting
www.ConsumerReports.org.
Photo Credit: Green Mountain Coffee
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