Single Serve Coffee Machines
This article will explain the toll that the single serve (keurig) machines have taken on the environment, as well as why the coffee out of these machines doesn't taste very good.
At this very moment, I'm drinking a cup of coffee brewed from a Keurig machine — and I can tell you with 100% certainty that it tastes like a stale, bland, watered-down version of the fresh stuff.
In short, it tastes awful.
This may be an unpopular opinion: Pod-based coffee appliances — such as the Keurig brewing system — have infiltrated the homes and offices of millions of American coffee drinkers. In fact, they're the second most popular brewing method after traditional drip coffee pots.
Yet the sudden explosion of these single-serve coffee machines is a paradox.
Yes, coffee gadgets minimize preparation and clean-up time in an increasingly fast-paced and stressful working world. But in addition to being horrible for the environment (at least for the non-reusable pod versions), many critics join my lament that the stuff these machines produce tastes at best mediocre, if not like tepid sludge.
Why?
To get some insight, I spoke with Elisha Nuchi, a wholesale manager at Cafe Grumpy— a small-batch coffee roaster and brewer in Greenpoint, Brooklyn — with over five years of experience working in coffee.
I also contacted Keurig, which leads the single-serve coffee market, to understand their sourcing and packaging process. The company declined to answer some of my questions.
Here's what I could gather about why Keurig and other single-serve brewing systems taste so bad.