What's new

Countdown to the New Year:

Happy New Year!!!

[Countrywide] Best Swedish coffee roasters — what beans do you actually recommend?

Applies to the whole country (not tied to a single city). Use when the answer is the same everywhere in that country.

EIA_Ask_SE

Administrator
Let’s build one Sweden-wide thread for people looking for the best coffee roasters in Sweden — and where to buy truly great beans (espresso or filter). Lists get outdated fast, so I’m mainly after recent, personal experience: what you bought, how it brewed, and whether you’d reorder.

If you’ve tried Swedish roasters lately, please share:
  • The roaster name + city (Stockholm / Gothenburg / Malmö / elsewhere)
  • Your top 1–3 picks and the exact beans you recommend
    (origin, process, roast level if you remember — or just the bag name)
  • What it worked best for: espresso / filter / moka / AeroPress
  • Flavor notes in plain language: bright & fruity / chocolatey / nutty / funky / super clean, etc.
  • Value check: worth the price, or good but expensive?
  • Where you like to buy coffee beans in Stockholm (best cafés/shops with fresh roast dates)
  • Any roasters that are popular online but you found overhyped
  • Bonus: best coffee subscription in Sweden — which ones are consistent, and why?

👉 If someone wants the one bag that shows what Swedish specialty coffee can do, which roaster + bean would you choose?
 
Solution
A useful way to reply here (so people can actually buy a great bag) is to share one short method + a few concrete options.

Step 1: Pick what you brew at home​

  • Espresso: choose a roaster that sells an espresso-specific roast (usually a bit more developed, easier to dial in).
  • Filter / pour-over: look for lighter roasts and “clean” washed coffees (or go “funky” with natural/anaerobic if you like fruitier flavors).
  • AeroPress / moka: you can go either way, but medium roasts are often forgiving.

Step 2: What to write in your recommendation​

When you post a roaster, include:

  1. Roaster + city
  2. Bean name (or origin + process)
  3. Brew method you used +...
A useful way to reply here (so people can actually buy a great bag) is to share one short method + a few concrete options.

Step 1: Pick what you brew at home​

  • Espresso: choose a roaster that sells an espresso-specific roast (usually a bit more developed, easier to dial in).
  • Filter / pour-over: look for lighter roasts and “clean” washed coffees (or go “funky” with natural/anaerobic if you like fruitier flavors).
  • AeroPress / moka: you can go either way, but medium roasts are often forgiving.

Step 2: What to write in your recommendation​

When you post a roaster, include:

  1. Roaster + city
  2. Bean name (or origin + process)
  3. Brew method you used + 1–2 simple notes (e.g., “bright berry”, “chocolatey”, “super clean”)
  4. Would you reorder? (yes/no + why)

Step 3: Easy “starter” options (so new people don’t get lost)​

  • Stockholm: Drop Coffee is a well-known specialty roaster and café. A good first try is usually one of their washed filter coffees if you like clean, bright cups.
  • Sweden-wide: If you want to explore many roasters, try a subscription that lets you choose espresso vs filter, and always check the roast date when it arrives.

Step 4: Where to buy beans in Stockholm​

Look for cafés/shops that show roast dates, store bags away from sunlight, and will grind only if you ask. If a bag has no roast date, I usually skip it.

Bonus: “official” way to find serious coffee people​

The Specialty Coffee Association has a Sweden chapter, and their events/community can help you discover roasters and baristas beyond social media hype.

Official sources (helpful context + roaster info):
 
Solution
Back
Top