this post was submitted on 17 Jun 2025
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Coffee

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Finding good roasters or coffee shops, especially local, isn’t always easy, so I think it would be good to share the places we discover

Here’s my list of local and not-local favourite shops, hope it’s helpful.

Kicco Caffè Pieve di Cento, Bologna, Italy

This is my closest roaster, it’s a very small business working mainly with Italian-style blends and roasts, however it also sells a small but nice selection of monorigin beans, which changes during the year. They also sell a variety of tools for many brewing styles.

My favorite coffee there is the Ethiopian Sidamo

Two bags of coffee by Kicco Caffè, the one on the right is Ethiopian coffee

Forno Brisa Bologna, Italy

Forno Brisa is a local chain of bakeries that in recent years embraced the specialty coffee wave, becoming a roastery themselves. Even though baked products are their main activity, you can find very good roasts there. In the physical shop, the staff is well trained and they can explain you in detail the characteristics of the coffees on the shelf.

At Forno Brisa I’ve tasted one of my favourite coffees ever, the Colombian Campo Hermoso

A bag of coffee, Campo Hermoso, Colombia, by Forno Brisa

La Libertaria - torrefazione autogestita Galbiate, Lecco, Italy

This store in particular was recommended by a Fediverse contact of mine. It’s a roastery that imports a variety of beans from small farmers, carefully selecting supply chains that ensure good working conditions for the farmers. They contribute to many projects focusing on cooperatives and specific areas facing various kinds of issues, such as the Chiapas state of Mexico.

Coffee bags by La Linertaria

Sprout Roasters Eindhoven, The Netherlands

I’ve found this roastery while looking for a shop selling good quality decaf coffee. This one in particular offers a wide selection of beans, decaf included, and also sells the decaf projects kit by James Hoffman.

It’s a shame that delivery costs from The Netherlands to Italy were so high because I really loved their coffee, especially the Colombian decaf one

A bag of coffee from Rwanda by sprout roasters,

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Local shop roasts good beans, I buy from them.

[–] fritobugger2017@lemmy.world 1 points 3 hours ago

I live in Hanoi, Vietnam. I buy online from the Viet Beans roaster that does exclusively Vietnamese farm sourced beans. https://www.facebook.com/vietbeanscoffee

I also sometimes buy from Oriberry which is the original 3rd wave farm to shop roaster in Hanoi. https://oriberry.com/

[–] nguarracino@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 hours ago

I went to school at Penn State. Ever since I started as a student in 1996, I have gotten my beans from The Cheese Shoppe in State College, PA. It's been there for something like 45 years and is an institution in town.

[–] GissaMittJobb@lemmy.ml 2 points 13 hours ago

https://kafferosterietkoppar.se/

Local roaster here in the Stockholm area. Excellent quality

[–] tankplanker@lemmy.world 2 points 17 hours ago (1 children)

UK based. I did get all my beans from Outpost Coffee as they my local specialty roaster but they got too expensive for me when they went from about £40 a kg to about £55 a kg. I mostly buy from Rave Coffee, they aren't as good as Outpost but two thirds of the current price before their regular offers, and good enough. When you buy nearly 2kg a month its a lot of extra cash to spend over a year.

I do buy from local specialty shops when I travel, picked up some beans from Island Roasted when I was in the Isle of Wight last week.

I keep meaning to try some of the more interesting beans from Sigma Coffee, they seem to have a great selection but they are even more expensive the Outpost.

[–] leonard@lemmy.world 1 points 12 hours ago* (last edited 12 hours ago)

Try Coffeeplant. https://www.coffee.uk.com/

Under thirty quid for a kilo of their beans near the top end and they have a really interesting selection. The shop has been a bit of a low key Portobello Institution for a long time, and whenever I go in I always try to try something new but their Monsooned Malabar and Kenya Peaberry are the just the tits. Do a blend of the two and its like speedballing with Richard Prior.

[–] TrustedTyrant@sopuli.xyz 2 points 1 day ago

French Truck Coffee and Rêve Coffee Lab. There’s a couple other options for me locally but those two are better. I have also tried the coffee from stirling soap and I’ll probably get another bag with my next order from them.

[–] jeena@piefed.jeena.net 3 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

I have tried a couple of local roaster and also some reasonable priced online ones and found one online which is good but the local one (I only have to walk ca. 15 minutes to get there) is funnilyvenough called "Better Best Coffee". There are one or two which are closer but theirs is the best.

[–] Moonguide@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 day ago

A light roast from Marcala, Honduras. It's pretty good, but a bit finnicky on my espresso. Either that, or I'm not as good with it as I thought.

[–] lavaryx@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 day ago

Stopped in at a coffee shop in Vermont one early morning for a latte and have been buying my beans from him ever since. I’m not local to the area but he ships anywhere in the US (might only be continental) for free with 3 or more bags purchased. I’m not overly picky and usually go for whatever dark roasts he has on hand, but I’ve never been disappointed when making my espresso.

Ungrounded Coffee Roasters

[–] dnzm@feddit.nl 3 points 1 day ago

I've had that Rwanda from Sprout too, in fact, I currently have it in my cupboard. Truly wonderful beans!

I live in the Netherlands, so shipping isn't an issue. I grab my beans from Fer in my home town. They tend to stock up on coffees from Dutch roasters like Sprout, Five Ways, DAK and some others too. Always nice to let myself be surprised by a bean I hadn't tried yet.

They're currently doing a thing with Kolibri, resulting in a really nice Brazilian roast under the Fer label.

When I'm in Groningen, I sometimes pick up a bag at Koffiestation — it's what we typically will have a bag from at the office, as well.

[–] derjules@lemmy.world 3 points 1 day ago
[–] pezhore@infosec.pub 2 points 1 day ago

If you're in the states, check out cxffoeeblack: https://cxffeeblack.com/

Black owned supply chain, makes excellent decaf that doesn't taste burned.

[–] ccunning@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago

Last time I checked my local roaster they had two options:

  1. A Dark/Medium/Light blend which, other than sorting into three separate piles, I have no clue how to brew

  2. Hazelnut flavored beans which I’m certain there is no good way to brew.

After trying a few subscriptions I’ve settled on buying beans from the grocery store that come from a roaster a couple hours drive away.

[–] actionjbone@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 day ago

MOM's Organic Market.

It's a Washington, DC-area local chain and they roast their own beans. High quality beans, complex flavor profiles, and very reasonable prices.

https://momsorganicmarket.com/departments/moms-coffee/

[–] SplashJackson@lemmy.ca 1 points 1 day ago

BuyCoffeeCanada is good

[–] derjules@lemmy.world 0 points 1 day ago