Blended Coffee

Why Is Coffee Blended?


You may have noticed some of your dark roast coffee says that is a particular blend of coffee. Coffee is blended for various reasons. It is often blended to get flavors and characteristics from different coffees, thus creating a cup that has the best characteristics of each of the coffees that have been blended together.

Another reason for blending is to get a flavor that fits a signature coffee type such as Starbucks, Folgers, Seattle's Best, Izzy or any other well-known brand.

Sometimes blends are used to make a coffee if that is fairly low-grade taste better than it actually is by putting in some better grade beams with the lower grade ones, producing a better cup.

One thing that must be decided when making a blend is whether to put all the green coffee beans together and roast them or to roast them separately and then blend them together.

One type of blended roast is in called a melange. In this type of blend you have some beans dark roasted, some medium, and some light roasted to get the best characteristics out of each of the different coffees in the blend. You may be trying for the boldness of the dark roast the smoothness of the medium roast and perhaps even some of the higher flavor tones from a light roasted coffee.

Blended coffees offer us a greater variety of coffee choices and give us many opportunities to experience more of our favorite brew.

One school of thought on blending is that you have signature blends in which you want to produce a consistent flavor to be sold exclusively at a particular chain store or Café - Starbucks and Gloria Jean's are in this category. There are consistency blends which have a very large number of bean sources in them - this makes it possible to substitute another kind of bean in place of one that is not available without the consumers noticing the change. Low cost beans - basically you're adding robusta beans or cheaper arabica beans to produce coffee at a lower price. Then there are single origin blends - they will get coffee from different parts of a certain region and put them into a blend.

In most cases, blending gives you a coffee that brings out favorable characteristics that are not available in an unblended one.

I hope you found this information useful and thank you for stopping by.

Feel free to comment, and as always, may your next cup be your best!

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