Flavour note

Honey coffee in London

52 speciality roasts from 29 London roasters feature honey notes.

Honey in speciality coffee presents as a warm, rounded sweetness that sits somewhere between floral and caramel, often accompanied by a slightly viscous, coating mouthfeel. Unlike the sharp brightness of citrus notes, honey reads as soft and lingering, with a gentle richness that persists into the aftertaste. It tends to emerge from naturally occurring sugars in the coffee cherry that survive and concentrate through careful processing and a light to medium roast level.

Honey in coffee presents a delicate sweetness with subtle floral undertones, creating a smooth and comforting cup. This flavour note emerges predominantly from beans grown in Colombia, Ethiopia, and Costa Rica, processed through either washed or natural methods that emphasise the sugars within each cherry. Across London, twenty-nine roasters craft this profile, with Nomad, Horsham and Kiss the Hippo among those offering particularly compelling expressions of this gentle characteristic.

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Top rated honey coffee roasts in London

Speciality roasts carrying honey notes, ordered by community rating.

Roasters producing honey coffee

London roasters with the most approved coffees carrying honey notes.

Notes that most commonly appear alongside honey in the same roasts.

Where honey coffee comes from

Origin countries that most often produce honey-forward coffees among London roasts.

How honey coffee is processed

Processing methods associated with honey notes in London roasts.

Washed 20 Natural 9 Anaerobic 5 Honey 5 Honey And Washed 1

How honey notes develop

Coffees from Ethiopia, particularly those processed using natural or honey methods, typically carry this note, as do many washed and honey-processed lots from Central America, including Guatemala and Costa Rica. The honey processing method, where varying amounts of fruit mucilage are left on the bean during drying, often produces this character directly, as the drying sugars influence the bean's flavour development. Certain high-altitude Colombian and Yemeni coffees also tend to express a honeyed sweetness, though this can arise from the bean's inherent biochemistry rather than processing alone.

What to look for

On a bag or cafe menu, look for tasting notes that pair honey with complementary descriptors such as stone fruit, floral, or caramel, which suggests the note is well integrated rather than isolated. Processing information is a useful indicator, as honey-processed or natural-processed coffees are more likely to carry this character than cleanly washed lots. Brew methods that preserve body and sweetness, such as a cafetiere, Chemex, or a well-dialled espresso, tend to allow honeyed notes to express themselves clearly.

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