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Le Petit Roast is on a short roasting pause. Orders resume June, 7th

Coffee beans

  • Décaf Le Calme coffee bag by Le Petit Roast – Mexican decaf medium-dark roast with chocolate notes on warm sand label
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    Decaf Le Calme – Mexico

    Price range: $22.00 through $59.00

    For the curious.

    Everything behind the cup.

    The beans
    Origin
    Mexico
    Region
    Chiapas
    Source
    Community lot
    Altitude
    900–1,800 m
    Variety
    Bourbon, Caturra, Catuai
    Process
    Washed, Sugar Cane EA decaf
    Brew guide

    Le Calme works with everything. Espresso, drip, French press, pour-over — no method loses. It's your evening cup, your second pot of the day, or your all-day coffee if you're cutting back on caffeine. It behaves closer to a regular coffee than any decaf you've tried. In milk drinks, it holds its character the same way our caffeinated roasts do. No compromise, just coffee without the jitters.

    Roast approach

    Medium-dark, leaning into the sweetness. Decaf beans roast differently. The Sugar Cane process makes them more porous, so they absorb heat faster and the cracks are harder to read. We slow the roast down to compensate, giving it an even development that regular speed would miss. The goal is to bring out the chocolate and brown sugar that Chiapas is known for, while keeping enough structure that the cup doesn't fall flat.

    Sugar Cane decaf
    99.9%
    caffeine-free
    no chemicals, no compromise

    Most decaf uses industrial solvents that strip flavor along with caffeine. Le Calme is decaffeinated using ethyl acetate naturally derived from fermented sugarcane — no chemicals added. The green beans are steamed to open their pores, the caffeine is gently dissolved out, and the beans are dried back down. The caffeine is gone. The coffee stays.

  • Décaf Red Plum coffee bag by Le Petit Roast – Colombian decaf light-medium roast with plum and berry notes on burgundy label
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    For the curious.

    Everything behind the cup.

    The beans
    Origin
    Colombia
    Region
    Piendamó, Cauca
    Producer
    Diego Bermúdez, Finca El Paraíso
    Source
    Single farm micro-lot
    Altitude
    1,960 m
    Variety
    Castillo
    Process
    Double anaerobic (with pulp), thermal shock washed, Sugar Cane EA decaf
    Brew guide

    Red Plum is built for filter brewing. Pour-over, V60, Chemex, AeroPress, batch brew — all of them let the plum and red berries come through clearly, with a clean acidity and milk chocolate sitting subtle in the background. Surprising, delicious, and the last coffee you'd guess is decaf.

    Before roasting, the beans go through a double anaerobic fermentation with the cherry pulp still on, using the Bermúdez family's custom Paraíso Red Fruit culture. Then a thermal shock wash (hot and cold water to lock in the aromatics), followed by dehumidified drying to stabilize the cup. Only then are they decaffeinated using the Sugar Cane process — ethyl acetate from sugar cane dissolves the caffeine while keeping the sweetness intact. If you've never had decaf that made you forget it was decaf, start here.

    Roast approach

    Light-medium roast, with precision. Red Plum comes from Finca El Paraíso, one of the most respected farms in specialty coffee. The Bermúdez family built the plum and berry character into the bean through their fermentation and thermal shock process before it ever reaches us. With all that complexity already there, the roast stays gentle — just enough development to open up the fruit, while the chocolate stays subtle in the background. Roasting darker would erase exactly what they spent weeks building in.

    SCA score
    89 / 100
    exceptional decaf
    0 Specialty · 80 100

    The SCA score is the global standard for grading coffee quality. Certified Q-graders cup each lot on aroma, flavor, body, acidity, and balance. Commercial coffee typically scores 60–70. Specialty grade starts at 80, with 85+ considered exceptional. Red Plum scored 89 — exceptionally high for a decaf. Most decaffeinated coffees lose flavor in the process. This one didn't.

  • Le Fort coffee bag by Le Petit Roast – Colombian dark roast with cocoa and molasses notes on dark chocolate brown label
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    Le Fort – Colombia

    Price range: $21.00 through $57.00

    For the curious.

    Everything behind the cup.

    The beans
    Origin
    Colombia
    Region
    Huila
    Source
    Regional blend
    Altitude
    1,500–1,800 m
    Variety
    Castillo, Colombia, Caturra
    Process
    Washed, sun-dried
    Brew guide

    Le Fort is built for strong drinks. Espresso first — this is where it sings, pulling thick and rich with cocoa up front, molasses behind, and a finish that holds its ground with milk. Moka pot, French press, anywhere you want body and backbone. It also brews clean as filter if that's your thing, just know you're leaving some of what it's for on the table. This is dark roast done right: intense without being burnt, rich without being heavy. If you came up on dark roast and wondered what "better coffee" might taste like, start here.

    Roast approach

    Dark, with restraint. "Dark roast" means different things to different roasters. For most commercial coffee, it means pushing past the bean's character until everything tastes the same — charred, bitter, one-dimensional. We take the roast deep, but pull it before that line. The goal is to keep the cocoa and molasses the Huila region is known for while building the body and boldness a dark roast should have. Deep color, full sweetness, no burnt edges. The cup should taste like dark-roast coffee, not like charcoal.

    SCA score
    84 / 100
    specialty grade
    0 Specialty · 80 100

    The SCA score is the global standard for grading coffee quality. Certified Q-graders cup each lot and rate it on aroma, flavor, body, acidity, and balance. Commercial coffee typically scores 60–70. Specialty grade starts at 80. Le Fort scored 84 — a clean, well-balanced cup. Dark roast done without cutting corners.

  • Le Mantissa coffee bag by Le Petit Roast – Brazilian medium roast with caramel and hazelnut notes on amber label
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    Le Mantissa – Brazil

    Price range: $20.00 through $54.00

    For the curious.

    Everything behind the cup.

    The beans
    Origin
    Brazil
    Region
    Sul de Minas, Minas Gerais
    Farm
    Fazenda Mantissa
    Source
    Single farm
    Altitude
    1,100–1,280 m
    Variety
    Red Catuai
    Process
    Natural
    Brew guide

    Mantissa is your all-day, any-method coffee. Espresso, filter, whatever you reach for. The aroma comes first — chocolate and hazelnut — then opens up on the palate with caramel and a quiet vanilla finish. A sweetness that stays without becoming heavy. In milk drinks, it's a natural fit: the caramel deepens, the body rounds out, and nothing gets lost. This medium roast Brazilian natural is the kind of coffee that works without making you think about it. Easy to brew, hard to get wrong.

    Roast approach

    Medium, slow, and patient. Natural processed beans dry inside the fruit, which means they keep more of its sugar. More sugar means they brown faster and burn easier — so we drop the temperature and stretch the roast, giving the sugars time to caramelize evenly without scorching. The result is a clean sweetness with no roasty edge. With a coffee from an Ernesto Illy Award-winning farm, the raw material is already exceptional. Our job is to let the farm speak.

    SCA score
    83 / 100
    specialty grade
    0 Specialty · 80 100

    The SCA score is the global standard for grading coffee quality. Certified Q-graders cup each lot and rate it on aroma, flavor, body, acidity, and balance. Commercial coffee typically scores 60–70. Specialty grade starts at 80. Mantissa scored 83 — a clean, well-balanced cup with no defects.

  • Racine coffee bag by Le Petit Roast – Ethiopian Yirgacheffe medium roast with tea and floral notes on dark green label
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    Racine – Ethiopia

    Price range: $23.00 through $62.00

    For the curious.

    Everything behind the cup.

    The beans
    Origin
    Ethiopia
    Region
    Yirgacheffe
    Producer
    Biru Bekele
    Source
    Single origin
    Altitude
    1,904 m
    Variety
    Heirloom
    Process
    Washed
    Brew guide

    Racine is tea in a coffee cup. The aroma lifts with jasmine, the palate brings bergamot, and a soft honey sweetness ties it together on the finish. Light body, clean finish, no harsh edges. As espresso, it's Earl Grey first — surprising, delicious, and unlike any coffee you've had before. On filter, the cup opens into layers — jasmine, honey, and a long finish that rewards slow sipping. Drink it black; milk would cover what makes it special. A medium roast Ethiopian Yirgacheffe for anyone who wants something refined without being fussy. Easy to brew, easy to love.

    Roast approach

    Medium roast, with a focus on clarity. Washed Ethiopian beans at 1,904 meters are dense and tightly structured — the altitude gives them a fine grain that resists heat. We apply steady, patient heat to develop sweetness and body without pushing past the florals. Push too far and the jasmine disappears. Pull back too much and it tastes grassy. The window is narrow. Racine lands right in the middle: enough development for the honey to come through, enough restraint to keep the bergamot bright.

    SCA score
    86 / 100
    specialty grade
    0 Specialty · 80 100

    The SCA score is the global standard for grading coffee quality. Certified Q-graders cup each lot and rate it on aroma, flavor, body, acidity, and balance. Commercial coffee typically scores 60–70. Specialty grade starts at 80, with 85+ considered exceptional. Racine scored 86 — a clean, complex cup with distinctive floral character.

  • L'Espresso coffee bag by Le Petit Roast – dark roast espresso blend with dark chocolate and caramel notes on dark brick red label
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    The Espresso Blend

    Price range: $20.00 through $54.00

    For the curious.

    Everything behind the cup.

    The beans
    Origins
    Brazil, Colombia, Uganda, Sumatra
    Composition
    Two Arabicas, one Robusta, one wet-hulled Sumatran
    Brazilian
    Mantissa — Minas Gerais, natural
    Colombian
    Le Fort — Huila, washed
    Robusta
    Uganda, grown at elevation
    Sumatran
    Caturra, wet-hulled
    Roast
    Dark
    Best for
    Espresso, milk drinks, moka pot
    Brew guide

    L'Espresso is your all-day coffee. Four origins, one cup: Brazilian sweetness from Mantissa, Colombian caramel from Le Fort, Ugandan Robusta for a proper crema, Sumatran wet-hulled for body. The cup is balanced — nothing fights, nothing pulls ahead. Chocolate-caramel sweetness up front, a full round body, and a soft crema that holds. Where it really comes alive is in milk drinks — lattes, cortados, cappuccinos, flat whites. The blend is built to hold its shape through steamed milk without going thin. Pull it as espresso or brew it in a moka pot. Either way, it delivers.

    Roast approach

    Roasting a blend is a different game. Four origins with four different densities, four rates of development, one roaster — and for L'Espresso, one batch. We blend the green beans first, then roast them all together the way classic Italian espresso has always been made. The Brazilian natural wants to run fast. The Colombian washed is slower. The Ugandan Robusta is the hardest of the four. The Sumatran wet-hulled is soft and porous — it came out of the hull wet and roasts differently. The whole batch goes to the edge of second crack. The job isn't to perfect each bean on its own terms. It's to find the one profile where all four meet and the cup tastes like L'Espresso.

    The Robusta question
    Why Robusta?
    on purpose

    Most specialty roasters won't touch Robusta. We use it on purpose. The Ugandan Robusta in this blend comes from the species' native home — Robusta still grows wild in Uganda's rainforests — and it's cultivated at elevation, which puts it in a class most commercial Robusta will never reach. It brings two things no Arabica can: a proper crema and the structural backbone a real espresso needs. Used right and in the right proportion, it doesn't dominate — it holds the blend together. The best Italian espresso blends have always included Robusta. We're not hiding it. It's one of the reasons this blend works.

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