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Stale Coffee

General Terms

In Simple Terms

Stale coffee has lost its spark - the aromas have faded and you're left with something flat and papery. Roasted coffee goes stale in weeks; green coffee hangs on for months. That's the whole point of home roasting - you control when freshness starts.

What is stale coffee?

Stale coffee is coffee that has lost its fresh aromatic character through oxidation, moisture exposure, or the natural off-gassing of volatile compounds over time. Both green and roasted coffee can go stale, though the mechanisms and timescales are different.

Roasted coffee goes stale relatively quickly. The Maillard and caramelisation reactions that produce hundreds of aromatic compounds during roasting create volatile molecules that begin escaping and reacting with oxygen from the moment the roast ends. Well-packaged roasted coffee (valve bag, sealed container) held in cool, dark storage can remain fresh for 4-6 weeks; improperly stored or packaging-free roasted coffee can go noticeably stale within days.

Green coffee goes stale much more slowly - over months or years rather than weeks. The cellular structure of the unroasted bean protects volatile precursors from rapid oxidation, which is why green coffee can hold its quality for 12-18 months in good conditions when roasted coffee from the same lot would be unusable within two months. For GCC's home roaster customers, this is one of the defining advantages of working with green coffee: you control when staleness begins by controlling when you roast.