Description

Italian Extra Dark Roast Coffee is made from beans roasted far longer than light or medium roasts, producing very dark, nearly black beans with a shiny, oily surface. This extended roasting process creates a deep, smoky, and bold flavor while softening or muting the bean’s original regional characteristics, resulting in a rich, intense coffee taste.

Italian Roast” refers to a roasting style rather than a specific coffee origin. It is known for its strong aroma, low acidity, and full-bodied profile. This roast is often preferred by coffee drinkers who enjoy powerful, robust flavors and a pronounced roasted character in their cup.

What Makes It “Extra Dark”?

During roasting:

  • Beans are exposed to higher heat for a longer time
  • Natural sugars caramelize deeply
  • Oils rise to the surface
  • Most original bean flavors are muted

The result is a bold, intense roast-forward flavor.

Italian Roast typically tastes:

  • Deep and smoky
  • Bold and strong
  • Bittersweet (dark chocolate notes)
  • Low acidity
  • Heavy, full body

It emphasizes roast flavor over origin flavor.

Is It From Italy:

No, it’s not about where the beans are grown.
“Italian Roast” simply describes a style popular in traditional Italian espresso culture, often associated with Espresso.

Best Uses:

  • Espresso
  • Moka pot
  • Strong drip coffee
  • Coffee drinks with milk (latte, cappuccino)

Roasted Whole Bean:

Whole bean coffee is coffee that has been roasted but not ground. The beans are sold intact, and you grind them yourself right before brewing. Once coffee is ground, it starts losing flavor and aroma quickly because more surface area is exposed to air. Whole beans stay fresh much longer. Grinding right before brewing preserves aroma, natural oils, and complex flavors.

Ground Coffee:

Coffee beans that have been roasted and then ground into small particles so they can be brewed with water. Good for auto-drip, just like the grocery store style, for coffee pots. Without grinding, you wouldn’t get proper coffee extraction.

Coarse Grind:

Refers to coffee beans that have been ground into large, chunky particles, similar in texture to sea salt or raw sugar. Best for brewing methods with longer contact time between water and coffee.

French Press:

Refers to coffee ground coarse, with large, chunky particles, similar to sea salt or coarse sugar. It’s specifically suited for brewing with a French press, where coffee grounds steep directly in hot water for several minutes before being separated by a metal mesh plunger.

Espresso:

Refers to coffee that’s ground very fine, almost like table salt or powdered sugar (but slightly gritty, not fluffy like flour). Espresso grind is made for espresso machines, where hot water is pushed through finely ground coffee under pressure.

Fine Grind:

Fine grind coffee is coffee that’s ground into very small particles, similar in texture to table salt (finer than sand, but not as soft as flour). It’s used for brewing methods where water passes through coffee quickly and needs more surface area to extract flavor.

Italian Roast Coffee FAQ

What does Italian Roast Coffee taste like?

Italian Roast Coffee has a bold, smoky, extra dark flavor with low acidity, heavy body, strong aroma, and a bittersweet dark chocolate-style finish.

Is Italian Roast Coffee an extra dark roast?

Yes. Italian Roast is an extra dark roast style known for darker beans, roast-forward flavor, low acidity, and a fuller body.

Is Italian Roast Coffee good for espresso?

Yes. Italian Roast works very well for espresso, moka pot coffee, strong drip coffee, and milk-based drinks like lattes and cappuccinos.

Can I order Italian Roast Coffee as whole bean?

Yes. You can choose whole bean coffee or select grind options such as coarse, espresso, fine grind, French press, or ground.

Is Italian Roast Coffee actually from Italy?

No. Italian Roast refers to a roasting style, not a coffee origin. It is inspired by traditional Italian espresso-style roasting.

Additional information

Weight 0.76 lbs

Customer Reviews

No reviews yet.