Coffee

7 Coffee Brands to Avoid

There are so many coffee brands on the market. Which one do you choose?

Most people have just a couple of qualifiers when purchasing their coffee, typically taste and price.

However, it’s worth considering more than just taste and price.

There are some “dirty” coffee brands out there, and they may be harming not only your body but also the planet.

For this list, we’re using factors such as how the coffee is picked, sustainability practices, the quality of the coffee used, the use of pesticides and other harmful chemicals, and the ethical practices of the company producing it.

Coffee brands to avoid

folgers brand

Folgers

Ground coffee, instant, and pods

This is a huge brand of coffee and is an iconic American brand. Although Folgers (J.M. Smucker) states on their website that they are concerned about sustainability and ethical working conditions, they reject all the common certifications to ensure this is happening.

The coffee supply chain uses pesticides, herbicides, and fungicides. They do not offer an organic variety, and all their coffee is pre-ground and not fresh.

Although this brand is cheap and convenient, you are getting poor-quality coffee.

See Folgers at Amazon.com

maxwell house

Maxwell House

Ground coffee, instant, and pods

This is another iconic American brand owned by Kraft. Again, this brand rejects sustainability certification fair trade certifications, and does not offer an organic product.

Therefore, their coffee may have chemicals and molds present. All their coffee is pre-ground, and freshness is an issue.

See Maxwell House at Amazon.com

nescafe coffee

Nescafé

Instant and Ground coffee

Nescafe is a huge multinational brand of coffee owned by Nestle.

We commend Nescafe partnering with for the Rainforest Alliance, the Sustainable Agriculture Network (SAN), and the Common Code for the Coffee Community (4C), but they do not offer organic certified coffees. Therefore, their coffee may contain chemicals and mold.

They only offer instant coffees, ground coffee, or pods, so again, freshness is a concern.

See more Nescafe coffee at Amazon.com

dunkin donuts brand coffee

Dunkin Donuts

Store brand

Dunkin Donuts is a popular coffee shop chain serving whole bean and ground coffee at retail locations and online.

All Dunkin’s restaurant-made espresso beverages are now Rainforest Alliance certified, and about 30% of their dark roast coffee beans. As for the rest of their coffee, it seems like it could be sourced from anywhere.

They do not offer organic varieties, so their coffee may contain chemicals and molds. The grocery store Dunkin Donuts coffee is produced by J.M. Smucker, the same as Folgers.

See more Dunkin Donuts coffee at Amazon.com

cafe bustelo

Cafe Bustelo

Ground, Instant, Whole beans and Pods

This Latin American brand is popular in the Americas. Bustelo is yet another coffee brand both owned and distributed by J.M Smucker and doesn’t have any certifications regarding the ethical and environmentally friendly sourcing of their coffee beans.

It also looks like they don’t have any organic varieties.

See Cafe Bustelo at Amazon.com

k cups

Keurig K-Cups

Disposable pods

We’re not talking about a particular brand of coffee apart from their parent company Green Mountain (which, by the way, is a good coffee according to the brand qualifiers we used here), but a brewing method.

While convenient for the consumer, single-use K-cups send a huge amount of waste to landfills each year. Plastic pods cannot be recycled easily by most cities and, therefore, have to be disposed of. The traditional coffee-making method produces little waste since coffee grounds are compostable and readily biodegradable.

Consider using reusable K-Cups.

seattle's best

Seattle’s Best

Whole bean, Ground, Instant, and Pods

This brand should be called Starbucks’ “dirty little secret.”

Although Starbucks prides itself on ensuring ethical and environmentally friendly practices are used in their coffee production and offers organic varieties, their Seattle’s Best brand doesn’t hold to the same standards.

It is basically Starbucks’ way of competing with cheap brands like Folgers and Maxwell House. They do offer a couple of organic varieties.

See Seattles Best coffee at Amazon.com

How to choose a great coffee

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Luckily, there are hundreds of great coffee brands out there to choose from. When shopping for coffee, here are a few things to look for.

  1. Make sure the coffee is grown sustainably and ethically.
    Look for Fair Trade and Rain Forest Alliance certifications. There are many of these types of certifications worldwide, and they should be listed on the bag or the company’s website.
  2. Choose organic coffee when possible.
    This helps ensure the beans are free from pesticides, herbicides, and fungicides. Purity Coffee is a brand that’s certified free from pesticides, mycotoxins, and fungus.
  3. Choose light to medium roasted beans.
    The lighter the roast, the more health-promoting phenols the beans will retain. Roasting coffee darkly destroys some of the healthy aspects of the beans.
  4. Taste
    Choose a coffee you enjoy drinking, and don’t buy a bulk amount of a brand before you know how it tastes.
  5. Grind coffee on your own
    There is something intimate and magical when you grind coffee beans. The flavor you feel, the feeling of the grinder in your hands — it’s a great aesthetic pleasure.

References

  • Josiane Alessandra Vignoli, Marcelo Caldeira Viegas, Denisley Gentil Bassoli, Marta de Toledo Benassi, Roasting process affects differently the bioactive compounds and the antioxidant activity of arabica and robusta coffees, Food Research International, Volume 61, 2014, Pages 279-285, ISSN 0963-9969, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.foodres.2013.06.006

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