For the curious.
Everything behind the cup.
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.
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.
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.


