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The most expensive coffee in the world isn’t actually what you’d expect.

It’s a little different to some industries where you’d expect the most expensive to be the best. It’s not quite that simple in the coffee industry though.

I’ve had to explain a few times to family and friends when they have returned from trips with bags of magical beans that they paid a small fortune for, well… crap (sometimes quite literally).

So fiirstly I have made 2 lists.

The first one is the most expensive coffees in the world from a quality standpoint, these are the costly because of their excellent attributes at origin which are usually purchased by some of the best coffee roasters in the world.

The Most Expensive Coffee In The World

The second list is the most expensive coffees in the world from a well marketed standpoint and although the quality rarely matches the price point they have some unusual quirk.

 

8 Most Expensive Coffees in the World

Most Expensive Coffee (Quality)

  1. Lamastus Family Estate, Gesha – Panama . $6200/lb (£11200/kg)

  2. Fazenda Santa Ines – Brazil

  3. Huehuetenango – Guatemala

  4. Los Planes, Pacamara – El Salvador

Most Expensive Coffee (Marketing)

  1. Kopi Luwak. $590/lb (£1000/kg)

  2. Black Ivory

  3. Kona – Hawwai

  4. Blue Mountain – Jamaica

  

For many years, the average person associated coffee with grainy instant powder.


 

Perfectly
perfunctory but not necessarily anything to write home about.


Over the last few decades though, the emergence of high street coffee chains, hipster cafes and specialist gourmet bean retailers have contributed to the rise of aficionados.

Like wine snobs, coffee snobs love to hunt for high quality coffee beans and blends to give them a unique beverage drinking experience.

 

The Most Expensive Coffee In The World

  

This means that for them a “posh” coffee refers to more extravagant products than a jar with “Gold Blend” stuck to the label.

Instead, they explore flavour profiles provided by master bean growers, pickers and roasters, who have spent years experimenting with cross breeding coffee plant strains, and nurturing various soil conditions.

Again, just like in the case of wine grapes, the soil conditions which the coffee plant is rooted in can bestow beans with different notes – fruity, sweet, acidic, sour.

Growers can win awards for cultivating truly irresistible single origin beans, whilst roasters can meticulously pick blends which complement each other and provide brews which taste like various fruits, or sometimes even deserts.

 

DISCOVER THE BEST COFFEES IN THE WORLD WITH BATCH COFFEE CLUB

  

Award winning beans can sometimes lead to limited runs being sold, which in turn can bestow a hefty price tag onto the bag they come in.

  

Summary
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Related Content

   

What is the Most Expensive Coffee in the World?

What may surprise you however, is that the most expensive coffee in the world is literally, well.. “crap”. Literally. Sort of.

Black Ivory Coffee, is an arabica bean harvested grown in Surin region of Northern Thailand that has been filtered through the digestive tract of an elephant.

Yep, you read that right – a herd of about twenty elephants are given Arabica cherries that are grown at a high altitude, hidden in their favourite food, such as rice, banana, and tamarind.

ElephantCoffee The Most Expensive Coffee In The World