Best Coffee for French Press: What to Look For

Choosing beans that shine in immersion brewing


French press isn't picky. Almost any coffee will produce a drinkable cup. But some coffees genuinely excel in this method while others waste their potential.

Here's what to look for when choosing coffee specifically for French press brewing.


Why Bean Choice Matters for French Press

French press is an immersion method. Coffee steeps in water for 4 minutes, extracting thoroughly. The mesh filter allows oils and fine particles through, creating a full-bodied cup.

This brewing style:

  • Amplifies body: Heavy, bold coffees get heavier and bolder
  • Mutes subtlety: Delicate floral or fruity notes can get lost in the thickness
  • Highlights richness: Chocolate, caramel, nutty notes shine

The best French press coffees work with these characteristics, not against them.


Roast Level: Medium to Dark

Generally, medium to dark roasts perform best in French press.

Why Darker Works

  • Developed sugars create caramel, chocolate, roasted notes that complement the heavy body
  • Lower acidity prevents the cup from becoming muddy-tasting
  • Bold flavors hold up to the extraction intensity

Can You Use Light Roasts?

Yes, but the result is different. Light roasts in French press produce:

  • More acidity (which can taste sharp in the heavy body)
  • Muted origin characteristics (the clarity that makes light roasts special gets buried)
  • Sometimes, an odd combination of body and brightness

If you love light roasts, try pour over instead—it's designed to highlight what makes them special.


Origin Profiles That Excel

Certain coffee origins have natural characteristics that French press amplifies well:

Brazilian

Chocolatey, nutty, low acidity. Brazilian coffees were practically designed for French press. The heavy body gets emphasized, the muted fruit notes aren't missed.

Sumatran / Indonesian

Earthy, full-bodied, sometimes funky. These already-heavy coffees become almost syrupy in French press. Distinctive, polarizing, but excellent if you like that profile.

Colombian

Balanced, sweet, medium body. Colombian coffees are versatile—they work in most methods. In French press, they produce a reliable, approachable cup.

Ethiopian (Natural Process)

Berry, wine, sometimes funky. Natural-processed Ethiopians have enough intensity to cut through French press's heavy body. The fruitiness survives better than with lighter roasts.


Blends vs. Single Origin

Case for Blends

Blends are often designed for balance and approachability. They tend to be:

  • Consistent batch to batch
  • Designed for multiple brewing methods
  • Balanced to avoid any extreme characteristic

If you want a reliable, everyday French press coffee, a well-made blend is a safe choice.

Case for Single Origins

Single origins offer distinctiveness. For French press, look for single origins with:

  • Bold, pronounced flavors (not delicate)
  • Medium-dark roast levels
  • Lower acidity origins (Brazil, Sumatra, Peru)

Freshness Still Matters

Whatever you choose, freshness matters.

Stale coffee in French press tastes flat and hollow. The method can't compensate for old beans. Fresh coffee—roasted within the last 2-3 weeks—will always outperform coffee that's been sitting for months.

Look for roast dates on bags, not just "best by" dates. If there's no roast date, the roaster may be hiding something.


Grind: Buy Whole Bean

French press requires coarse grinding. Pre-ground coffee is usually too fine for French press (it's optimized for drip machines).

Your options:

  • Buy whole bean, grind at home: Best for freshness and correct grind size. Burr grinder recommended.
  • Ask for coarse grind: When ordering, specify "French press grind" or "coarse." Use within 1-2 weeks.
  • Use pre-ground anyway: It'll work, just expect more sediment and possibly over-extraction. Reduce steep time to compensate.

What We Recommend

At Spiritus, our offerings that work well for French press include:

  • Signature Blend: Balanced, chocolatey, designed for versatility. Reliable French press performer.
  • Aether Dark: Bold, smoky, full-bodied. Made for immersion brewing.
  • Any medium-dark single origin: Check our current offerings for darker roasted options.

Our lighter roasts (Lilacia, seasonal single origins) can work in French press but show better in pour over.

Shop our current offerings →


Experiment

These are guidelines, not rules. Coffee taste is personal.

Maybe you love light roast Ethiopian in French press. Maybe you prefer Brazilian in pour over. The only way to know your preference is to try.

Buy a few different coffees. Brew them the same way. Taste them side by side. Notice what you like.

Your palate is the final authority.

Sip in the moment.


Spiritus Coffee Co.
Consciously crafted. Roasted with intention.

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