Roast Freshness Guide: Degassing, Optimal Window, Storage
Freshness is one of the most overlooked variables in home coffee making. Most people know to buy fresh bread, fresh milk, fresh vegetables — but coffee? That bag with a "best before 2027" date looks fine. The problem is that the best-before date on a coffee bag tells you almost nothing useful. What matters is the roast date, and what happens between roasting and your cup is a fascinating chemistry story that directly affects what you taste.
CO2 and degassing: the chemistry
During roasting, complex chemical reactions (Maillard, caramelisation, pyrolysis) generate significant amounts of carbon dioxide (CO₂). This gas is trapped inside the porous cell walls of the roasted bean. Immediately after roasting, a coffee bean can contain between 4 and 12 millilitres of CO₂ per gram, depending on roast level — darker roasts produce more.
Degassing is the gradual release of this CO₂ after roasting. It happens in two phases: a rapid phase in the first 24–48 hours (roughly 40% of total CO₂ is released) and a slow phase that continues for weeks. The rate of degassing depends on storage temperature (warmer = faster), roast level (dark roasts degas faster), and critically whether the coffee is whole bean or ground.
Ground coffee degasses roughly 40 times faster than whole beans. This is one of the core reasons why grinding just before brewing preserves flavour: the dramatically increased surface area accelerates both degassing and oxidation.
Too much CO2: the too-fresh problem
Coffee roasted less than 3–5 days ago is saturated with CO₂. In espresso extraction, this gas creates a physical barrier between water and the soluble compounds in the coffee: water slides around CO₂ bubbles rather than extracting evenly. The result is simultaneously under-extracted (lacking sweetness and depth) and unpredictable. The crema is abundant but unstable, disappears quickly and shows large bubbles — a sign of excessive residual CO₂.
For pour-over brewing, the effect is visible during the bloom: pouring the first water onto very fresh coffee produces a dramatic, rapid swell as CO₂ escapes under heat. If this bloom is too explosive, it can create preferential water channels through the coffee bed and unbalance the extraction.
Too little CO2: the stale problem
At the other extreme, coffee that has fully exhausted its CO₂ suffers from oxidation and aroma loss. Oxidation is a chemical reaction between oxygen and the lipid and aromatic compounds in coffee, transforming them into molecules that taste rancid, cardboard-like, musty. This process is irreversible. No grinder or machine can restore the aromas of stale coffee.
Aroma loss through volatilisation is a separate phenomenon: the most aromatic compounds are also the most volatile. They simply evaporate on contact with air, without any oxidation. This is why coffee stored in an open container loses its fragrance even if there's no trace of rancidity yet.
The optimal freshness window by brew method
| Method | Light roast | Medium roast | Dark roast |
|---|---|---|---|
| Espresso | 5–30 days post-roast | 7–21 days post-roast | 3–14 days post-roast |
| Pour-over (V60, Chemex) | 7–45 days post-roast | 7–35 days post-roast | 5–25 days post-roast |
| AeroPress | 7–35 days post-roast | 7–30 days post-roast | 5–20 days post-roast |
| Cold brew | 14–50 days post-roast | 10–40 days post-roast | 7–30 days post-roast |
| Moka pot | 5–25 days post-roast | 5–21 days post-roast | 3–14 days post-roast |
These windows are guidelines, not absolute rules. A well-sealed, quality bag in ideal conditions can extend these ranges. The key insight is that darker roasts have shorter windows (they degas faster and contain more oils that oxidise quickly) while filter brewing is more tolerant of both fresh and slightly older coffee than espresso.
How to read the roast date on a bag
The roast date is the most valuable piece of information on a specialty coffee bag. Here's a guide to what you'll find, from most to least useful:
- Exact roast date (e.g., "Roasted 08.04.2026"): Ideal. You know precisely where you are in the freshness window.
- Roast week (e.g., "Week 14 2026"): Acceptable. Accurate to within a week.
- Best-before date with roast offset mentioned (e.g., "Best before 08.10.2026 — roasted 6 months before BBE"): Acceptable if the offset is stated, useless otherwise.
- Best-before date alone, no roast reference: Nearly useless. A bag reading "BBE 10/2026" could have been roasted in April 2025 or September 2026 — without context, this tells you nothing about freshness.
- No date at all: Avoid. This is a sign of commodity coffee with no freshness accountability.
The best-before convention on industrial coffee is a commercial standard that allows months of warehouse storage without ever revealing the coffee's true age. Specialty roasters have adopted the roast date as a transparency standard — it's the equivalent of a harvest date on a wine label.
The one-way degassing valve: what it actually does
The small plastic circle on most specialty coffee bags is a one-way degassing valve. Its function is precise and dual:
- Lets CO₂ out: After packaging, coffee continues to degas. Without the valve, internal pressure would swell and eventually burst a hermetically sealed bag. The valve allows CO₂ to escape outward.
- Keeps air out: The valve is one-way — it doesn't allow oxygen to enter the bag from outside. The coffee is protected from oxidation while still being able to degas naturally.
The valve is a practical compromise: the bag can be sealed immediately after roasting (optimal for freshness), the coffee degasses safely, and oxygen stays out. Without the valve, a roaster would need to wait 24–48 hours before sealing — during which time the coffee would oxidise.
What the valve doesn't do: It doesn't replace proper storage. A bag with a valve but a loose or improperly closed seal will allow air in normally. The valve only works when the packaging is otherwise hermetically closed.
Storage best practices
Once the bag is open, storage practices determine how quickly quality degrades:
- Airtight container: Stainless steel canister, glass jar with gasket seal, or the original bag closed tightly with a proper clip. The goal is to minimise exposure to oxygen and humidity.
- Room temperature (15–22 °C): Avoid the refrigerator — condensation from repeated opening accelerates deterioration faster than ambient warmth. The freezer is acceptable for long-term storage of large quantities, but only in a hermetically sealed bag, never opened repeatedly.
- Away from light: UV light accelerates oil oxidation. Use an opaque container or a closed cupboard.
- Away from moisture and strong odours: Coffee absorbs surrounding smells — spices, bread bags, cleaning products. A dedicated storage area is ideal.
- Whole bean until brewing: Grind no more than 15 minutes before extraction. Pre-ground coffee loses 50% of its volatile aromatics in under an hour exposed to air.
The bloom: using degassing to your advantage
The bloom is the initial wetting phase of pour-over brewing before the main extraction. Pouring 2–3 times the coffee weight in water (e.g., 30g water for 15g coffee) saturates the bed and allows residual CO₂ to escape before extraction begins. Waiting 30–45 seconds after the bloom lets the gas escape and the bed stabilise. The result is a more even, sweeter, more predictable extraction. The fresher the coffee, the more dramatic the bloom — allow up to 60 seconds for coffee under a week old.
Freshness isn't a connoisseur luxury — it's the minimum condition for the roaster's work to reach your cup intact. An exceptional coffee roasted three months ago will always be inferior to an ordinary coffee roasted last week. The roast date is the first line to read on any bag.