Hi, Adriana here.
At almost every farmers market, someone picks up a bag of coffee, looks over the table, and asks me:
“Do you have espresso beans?”
It is one of the questions we hear most often, and honestly, it can be surprisingly difficult to answer in a few seconds.
The simple answer is yes, we have several coffees that work beautifully for espresso.
The more complete answer is that espresso beans are not a separate type of coffee bean.
Espresso is a way of preparing coffee. The beans inside your espresso machine can come from any coffee origin, variety, blend, or roast level.
What matters is how the coffee was roasted, how it is ground, how it behaves in your machine, and most importantly, how you want your espresso to taste.
What Are Espresso Beans?
The term espresso beans usually refers to coffee that a roaster recommends for espresso brewing.
It does not describe a special coffee plant or bean variety.
Espresso is a concentrated coffee beverage made by pushing hot water under pressure through finely ground coffee.
You can make espresso with:
• A single origin coffee
• A coffee blend
• Arabica coffee
• Robusta coffee
• Medium roast coffee
• Dark roast coffee
• Light roast coffee
• Decaffeinated coffee
• Half caff coffee
That does not mean every coffee will taste equally good to every person or be equally easy to use.
Some coffees are more forgiving in an espresso machine. Others require careful grinding, temperature control, and recipe adjustments before they taste balanced.
That is why roasters still use labels such as “espresso blend” or “espresso roast.” The label helps customers identify a coffee that was selected or roasted with espresso preparation in mind.
Is Espresso a Roast Level?
No. Espresso is not a roast level.
For many years, espresso was strongly associated with darker roasted coffee because those coffees often produce the bold body, chocolate notes, lower perceived acidity, and rich flavour people expect from a traditional espresso.
Darker and medium dark coffees also tend to dissolve more easily during brewing, which can make them easier to dial in at home.
But espresso does not have to be dark.
Today, coffee drinkers prepare espresso using a wide range of roast levels. The best choice depends on whether you want something rich and familiar or bright and adventurous.
Which Roast Is Best for Espresso?
There is no single roast level that is best for everyone.
The right coffee depends on whether you drink straight espresso, Americanos, cappuccinos, macchiatos, or large milk based lattes.
Medium Dark Roast for Espresso
Medium dark coffee is a wonderful choice when you enjoy:
• Chocolate and caramel flavours
• A fuller body
• Gentle acidity
• A rich, comforting espresso
• Cappuccinos, macchiatos, and lattes
These coffees usually remain noticeable after milk is added.
They are also often easier to dial in than very light roasts, making them a practical option for home espresso machines.
This is the style I personally enjoy most.
Medium Roast for Espresso
Medium roasted coffee can offer a balance between sweetness, body, and the natural character of the beans.
Depending on the coffee, you may taste:
• Caramel
• Chocolate
• Nuts
• Soft fruit
• Gentle citrus
• Natural sweetness
Medium roasts can work beautifully for straight espresso, Americanos, and smaller milk drinks.
They are a good choice for someone who wants more origin character without moving into a very bright or highly acidic cup.
Light Roast for Espresso
Light roasted coffees can produce very expressive espresso with floral, fruit, citrus, or berry like flavours.
They may appeal to coffee drinkers who enjoy:
• Bright acidity
• Distinct origin flavours
• Fruit forward coffees
• More experimental espresso
• Longer espresso ratios
However, lighter roasts can be more challenging to extract evenly.
They often require a capable espresso grinder, very small grind adjustments, and a recipe suited to that particular coffee.
A light roast can make excellent espresso, but it may not produce the heavy, chocolatey shot someone expects when they ask for traditional espresso beans.
Can You Use Regular Coffee Beans for Espresso?
Yes.
Any whole coffee bean can technically be ground and used in an espresso machine.
The more useful question is:
Will that coffee create the flavour and texture you want?
A delicate floral coffee may taste beautiful as a pour over but become sharp or difficult to balance in a home espresso machine.
A rich medium dark blend may produce a smooth, forgiving espresso but offer less of the bright fruit character someone wants in a straight shot.
The brewing method does not determine whether the coffee is “regular” or “espresso.”
The flavour goal determines which coffee is the better match.
What I Ask Customers at the Market
When someone asks me whether we have espresso beans, I usually respond with another question:
How do you drink your espresso?
That one question tells me much more than the word espresso ever could.
If You Drink Lattes or Cappuccinos
I usually recommend a medium dark coffee with enough sweetness and body to remain noticeable through the milk.
Chocolate, caramel, nutty, and rich flavours tend to work especially well.
If You Drink Straight Espresso
You have more room to explore.
A medium roast can offer sweetness and balance, while a lighter roast may reveal more fruit, florals, and acidity.
If You Drink Americanos
Choose a coffee you enjoy without milk.
Because water opens the espresso into a larger drink, the coffee’s sweetness, roast character, and acidity become easier to notice.
If You Prefer Low Acidity and a Smooth Cup
A medium dark or dark roast may be the most comfortable place to begin.
The cup will usually feel fuller, rounder, and more roast driven.
If You Love Bright and Fruity Coffee
Try a medium or lighter roasted single origin coffee.
Just be prepared to spend a little more time adjusting your grinder and espresso recipe.
My Favourite Coffee for Espresso
My personal favourite for espresso is our Sunnyside Blend.
I enjoy making macchiatos and lattes, so I want a coffee with enough body and richness to stand up to milk without tasting overly roasted.
Sunnyside is blended after roasting. It combines medium roasted coffee with 30 percent dark roasted coffee, giving it the best of both worlds.
The medium roasted portion brings sweetness and balance.
The dark roasted portion adds body, richness, and a deeper roast character.
The result is a smooth, medium dark blend that works beautifully in espresso while still being versatile enough for drip coffee and other brewing methods.
That is another important point.
A coffee recommended for espresso does not have to be used only in an espresso machine.
You can brew the same beans using a drip brewer, French press, AeroPress, or pour over. The brewing method will simply reveal the coffee differently.
Do Espresso Beans Have More Caffeine?
Not automatically.
The word espresso does not tell you how much caffeine is in the bean.
Caffeine depends on several factors, including:
• The coffee species
• The amount of coffee used
• The beverage size
• The brewing recipe
• The final amount consumed
A shot of espresso is concentrated, but it is also served in a much smaller volume than a large mug of drip coffee.
Dark roast coffee is not automatically much stronger in caffeine than medium or light roast coffee.
When caffeine is your main concern, look at the amount of coffee used and the total drink rather than relying on the roast name.
Can Decaf Coffee Be Used for Espresso?
Absolutely.
Decaf espresso is simply decaffeinated coffee prepared using an espresso machine.
The same is true for half caff coffee.
A well roasted decaf or half caff can make a satisfying espresso, cappuccino, or latte without requiring a full dose of caffeine.
You may need to adjust the grind because decaffeinated coffee can behave differently from a regular coffee during espresso extraction.
But it does not require a special category of machine or brewing method.
Do You Need Coffee Labelled Espresso?
No.
You do not have to buy a bag with the word “espresso” printed on it.
That label can be helpful, especially when you want a classic, easy to dial in coffee. But it is a recommendation, not a brewing rule.
Instead, look at the coffee’s:
• Roast level
• Tasting notes
• Body
• Acidity
• Blend description
• Roaster recommendations
Chocolate, caramel, nutty, and full bodied coffees are often excellent starting points for milk based espresso drinks.
Fruitier and brighter coffees may suit someone who drinks espresso straight and enjoys more acidity and complexity.
Espresso Beans Frequently Asked Questions
Are espresso beans different from coffee beans?
No. Espresso beans are coffee beans. The term usually means the coffee was selected, blended, or roasted to work well when brewed as espresso.
Can I use any beans in an espresso machine?
Yes, but different coffees produce different flavours and may require different grinder settings and brewing recipes.
Are espresso beans always dark roasted?
No. Espresso can be made with light, medium, medium dark, or dark roasted coffee.
What coffee is best for espresso beginners?
A medium dark blend with chocolate, caramel, or nutty tasting notes is often an approachable and forgiving place to start.
What beans are best for espresso lattes?
Choose a coffee with sweetness, body, and enough flavour to remain noticeable through the milk. Medium dark blends often work especially well.
Can I use espresso beans for regular coffee?
Yes. Coffee labelled for espresso can also be brewed in a drip machine, French press, AeroPress, or pour over.
Is single origin coffee good for espresso?
It can be excellent. Single origin espresso can showcase distinctive flavours, but some coffees may require more careful recipe adjustments than a blend.
So, Do We Have Espresso Beans?
Yes.
We have coffees that make beautiful espresso, even though espresso is not a separate kind of bean.
At Crickle Creek, we roast each coffee to develop the flavours already present in it. Then we help you choose the one that suits your machine, your drink, and your personal taste.
For a classic latte, cappuccino, or macchiato, I recommend beginning with a smooth medium dark blend such as Sunnyside.
For straight espresso or Americanos, you may want to explore a balanced medium roast or a more expressive single origin.
The best espresso bean is not determined by a word on the bag.
It is the coffee that creates the cup you look forward to drinking.
We roast every Tuesday and Thursday, so order before our next roast and let your coffee naturally rest while it makes its way to you.
Here is to better mornings and espresso made exactly the way you enjoy it.
Adriana
Brew boldly. Live fully.