I remember the exact moment I realized most people were drinking coffee wrong. It was about eight years ago, standing in a roastery in Portland, watching a customer dump three tablespoons of sugar into a cup of what should have been a beautiful Ethiopian natural process. The roaster caught my eye and shrugged—we both knew what was happening. That coffee wasn’t bitter because of the bean. It was bitter because someone had roasted it to death.
That’s when I started paying attention to light roasts, not as some trendy third-wave thing, but as the actual solution to a problem I’d been seeing for years. Beginners hate coffee because they’ve never tasted what coffee is supposed to taste like.

Image Description: Light versus dark roast beans—notice the color difference that indicates roasting level
The Bitterness Myth That’s Been Holding You Back
Here’s what nobody tells you: bitterness in coffee isn’t a feature. It’s a manufacturing defect.
When I first started experimenting with roast profiles in 2016, I was convinced that darker roasts were “stronger” and therefore “better.” I’d pull shots that tasted like charcoal and convince myself it was sophisticated. Then I attended a cupping session with a Q-grader from Kenya, and she asked me a simple question: “Why are you trying to hide the coffee?”
That stuck with me. Dark roasts don’t taste bitter because they’re complex—they taste bitter because the heat has burned away the actual flavor compounds. The sug







