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Sunnyside’s Coffee

Black Rose Coffee is your neighborhood roaster

Our coffee is roasted in the Sunnyside neighborhood of Southeast Portland, Oregon. We take a lot of pride in delivering fresh coffee across our city, but nothing is better than walking an order over to one of our neighbors.

In December, 2022, the Sunnyside Neighborhood News invited Black Rose to sit down and talk about what it means to be a neighborhood small-batch coffee roaster. The article ran in the February, 2023 edition. You can read it via this link!!

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5 Myths About Coffee

  1. Dark Roast = More Caffeine

What is “strong” coffee? For centuries, coffee as we know it has been roasted to dark and oily, associating coffee with a rich, intense brew that we drink in shots for a jolt of energy, or add fats and sugar to round into a pleasant drinking experience. It’s strong coffee flavor alright. But it’s actually less caffeinated than….light roast!

Fact is, the darker you let coffee roast, the more of its caffeine-containing oil is burned off. Beans appear oily, but there is less material inside the bean. However, dark roast is less acidic than light and features familiar inviting, roasty flavors.

2. Fine Grind = Stronger Flavor

One of the first lessons I learned about brewing the perfect cup of coffee were the “4 ‘T’s’” (“four tees”): Time Temperature Turbulence and Texture. Each brewing method has its own parameters, but none are more important than the grind. There is a right place and time for all grinds, from coarse to powder fine.

Drip brewers, pour overs, and French presses need heated water to steep in coffee as it drains into the carafe or gets plunged. It needs a coarser grind.

Espresso machines use superheated water to create pressure and extract coffee from the grounds. It needs a fine grind. If you’re extracting manually with an AeroPress or the like, water needs to flow through the filter and pulling your coffee will be extremely difficult with powdery grinds. Manual espresso requires a more coarse grind than mechanical espresso.

3. A Pound = 16oz

Roasted coffee is significantly different from the green beans that arrive at the roaster. For one, green beans are raw. Fresh picked coffee beans, even after drying and processing, still contain a lot of their original moisture.

As the beans heat up, the processes of drying and puffing begins. No matter when in the roasting process beans are released, weight has been shed. This depreciation is a fact of life in the coffee roasting world. Artisan coffee, which costs more to source than large, commercial coffee, tends to compensate for depreciation by calling 12oz “a pound”. Black Rose uses grams and kilograms - not to be snobbish - but to politely offer an alternative to depreciated pounds.

Our 350g bag is similar to the 12oz bags you’ll find on store shelves. If you want more, 500g is more than a real pound (454g) and…kilos are 2.25 real pounds.

4. Tasting Notes = Added Flavor

Early on, Black Rose’s website used visuals of the various flavor notes present in the different offerings on our menu. Black Rose featured a Costa Rican coffee at the time which featured, among others, notes of lemon, and its profile included a picture of a juicy lemon cross-section.

Then, a customer asked me a fateful question that helped change my perspective on coffee roasting and opened my eyes to the essence of what bringing out flavor is all about: So, when do you add the lemon?

The answer to this question is as complicated as it is simple: I don’t.

Beans are roasted in the country of origin and flavor notes are assigned before they go to market. I review these flavor notes to chose coffees that fit the Black Rose taste profile you love. It’s up to me as a roaster, the equipment, and technique to appropriately bring out flavor notes.

After you brew your coffee, go ahead, add whatever flavor you like!

5. Fresh Coffee = Roasted Today

Freshness is all about time. Usually, it refers to the idea that the less time between harvest or preparation, the better the product. Not with coffee, green or roasted.

Green coffee is itself dried and processed, then bagged in a climate-control polymer bag called GrainPro, and/or in traditional burlap. Proper transportation and storage conditions can keep green coffee “fresh” for months or years. It will be months from when the beans are harvested until they go to market, and longer still until it is roasted.

Then, there’s fresh roasted coffee. Once released from the roaster, residual heat continues to cook the bean for hours, up to a day! Beans continue to release gas after cooling, which is where the flavor develops. This curing process is called “off-gassing”.

It’s not that you can’t grind and brew coffee straight out of a roaster’s cooling tray, it just won’t have all of its flavor yet. The peak of fresh flavor in coffee is about 7 days after roasting!

Black Rose roasts in small batches to deliver the most flavorful coffee possible

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Whichever Way You Roast It

Why is one coffee roasted medium, another dark roast and another light? 

What happens when coffee is roasted to a different temperature? 

It’s all about flavor

Coffee is grown all over the world, in uniquely different terrains, and there are numerous plant varieties. Coffee processing ranges, both regular coffee and decaf from traditional, low-tech methods to commercial washing. Before green coffee goes to market, it is batch-roasted and cupped (tested) locally. 

Whichever way you roast them, all coffees are beans.

Purveyors of green coffee provide detailed flavor profiles of each bean offered. It’s up to the coffee roaster to select beans with their desired flavor profiles, and then aim to recreate delicious-sounding words into flavorful, aromatic reality. 

It’s not that one bean needs to be roasted to one specific temperature in order to be “done”, more that we aim to bring out specific flavors, which manifest based on roasting time, temperature, and technique. 

Light roast highlights delicate fruit and floral profiles

Like blueberry, jasmine, kiwi, melon, orange

Dark roast brings out caramelized sweetness, chocolate, and roasted nuts

But there’s milk chocolate, baker’s chocolate, dark chocolate, cacao nib. There’s peanut, almond, walnut, brazil nut, hazelnut…it’s all in the bean, and it’s all up to the roaster to make it happen.

Black Rose has been obsessed with coffee from India for years. When we finally got a hold of India Karu Nadu Highlands, it was so good we had to offer it 3 distinct ways: Light, Dark, and Espresso Blend. The bean’s profile makes this possible. Sweet and toasty with chocolate chip cookie goodness as light roast, and caramelized, roasty and bittersweet like fresh baked banana bread as dark.

Black Rose makes it delicious, whichever roast you choose!

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Decaf is Coffee

It all begins with an idea.

Whether you drink coffee with caffeine or without, you know the catch phrase 

We’ve all heard it a million times: Death Before Decaf.

It’s printed boldly on coffee mugs and tshirts, bumper stickers and even other bags of coffee. Black Rose Coffee doesn’t believe in any of that. 

Decaf is coffee.

The same coffee everyone else drinks, just with the caffeine removed. And that process has advanced quite a lot from the days of orange-handle diner decaf. Decaf isn’t harsh chemicals and power-washing the taste off of every bean.

At Black Rose, decaf means delicious.

Decaf means choice and diversity of flavor profile. We love decaf and strive to bring it the respect it deserves and to give you the respect you deserve as a coffee lover. 

Clemmy’s Decaf!, our first and flagship decaf coffee, comes from a nature preserve and is grown alongside the organic sugarcane used in the decaffeination process. It won Black Rose’s first competitive medal. We have our eyes on bringing you award-winning decaf after award-winning decaf. 

Caffeine isn’t responsible for coffee’s flavor, but industrial decaffeination certainly has been responsible for removing both. 

Black Rose is proud to offer coffee decaffeinated via the cutting edge Mountain Water Process. Natural process coffee beans are decaffeinated at Descamex, the first and only decaffeination facility in Latin America, in Veracruz, Mexico. A patented process utilizing a solution of coffee extract and mineral water from Pico de Orizaba, the highest volcano in North America, decaffeinates the beans to 99.9%  without additional chemicals. In fact, Descamex analyses each batch of coffee and tailors the decaffeination solution’s mineral content to each unique crop. The resulting product is a fully flavorful, natural decaf on a quality scale of the finest coffees in the world. 


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