Kicking Horse Coffee, 454 Horse Power, Dark Roast, Whole Bean, 2.2 lb

Kicking Horse Coffee, 454 Horse Power, Dark Roast, Whole Bean, 2.2 lb
Kicking Horse Coffee, 454 Horse Power, Dark Roast, Whole Bean, 2.2 lb
Kicking Horse Coffee, 454 Horse Power, Dark Roast, Whole Bean, 2.2 lb
Kicking Horse Coffee, 454 Horse Power, Dark Roast, Whole Bean, 2.2 lb
Kicking Horse Coffee, 454 Horse Power, Dark Roast, Whole Bean, 2.2 lb
Kicking Horse Coffee, 454 Horse Power, Dark Roast, Whole Bean, 2.2 lb
Kicking Horse Coffee, 454 Horse Power, Dark Roast, Whole Bean, 2.2 lb

Key features

  • DARK ROAST, WHOLE BEAN: Velvety, earthy, spirited. This smooth riding dark horse conjures up power from the depths of the shadows. This is the winner, the champion of taste
  • TASTING NOTES, BREW METHOD: Heavy body, sweet tobacco, earthy with a black licorice finish. Recommended methods: French press, drip machine, pour over, and cold brew
  • ORIGIN INDONESIA, CENTRAL & SOUTH AMERICA: Grown in a socially and environmentally responsible way, by farmers with sustainable businesses they can depend on
  • ORGANIC, FAIRTRADE, KOSHER, SHADE GROWN, ARABICA COFFEE: Coffee that is good and fair for the coffee drinkers, the farmers and the planet. 100 percent Certified
  • ROASTED IN THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS: It's all deep, dark and delicious, roasted right below the towering Canadian Rocky Mountain peaks
Size35.2 Ounce (Pack of 1)
Color454 Horse Power - Dark Roast

Kicking Horse Coffee, 454 Horse Power, Dark Roast, Whole Bean, 2.2 lb

List Price: $56.55$50.90DEALYou Save: $5.65 (10%)
Free shippingFree Returns – 30 daysFree Order CancellationSecure Payment2–3 Days DeliveryGet It June 24, 2026In Stock (2)No marketing spamNo account requiredFulfilment by FedEx / Amazon / UPS / ShipwirePayPal / Card Buyer Protection

Customer Reviews

Reviews sourced from verified Amazon purchasers
4.6
out of 5
Based on 10 reviews
5
90%
4
10%
3
0%
2
0%
1
0%
Great coffee
Hector I.✓ Verified PurchaseApril 14, 2024
Bought the whole bean, the aroma is incredible when you grind it. Bag lasted 1 month.
Tastes nice
William M. Lake✓ Verified PurchaseApril 13, 2024
Good dark coffee, tastes very nice.
Great Coffee
D G Crowe✓ Verified PurchaseApril 8, 2024
We love Kicking Horse Coffee but cannot find it locally. I ordered this not realizing that it was whole bean and not ground. My mistake for not reading the information but it's not a problem because we have an electric grinder and actually prefer the taste over pre-ground. It is a full flavored coffee with no bitterness and we will buy more!
YUM!
Cb Crane✓ Verified PurchaseMarch 18, 2024
Kick ass coffee for sure! Smooth and delicious. My favorite brand.
Six years later and my superior rating still holds
R. Mandl✓ Verified PurchaseMarch 18, 2024
Updated review, Dec 2022:

I first tried the 454 in 2016, and my initial review below stands. I've sampled others in the Kicking Horse stable too, and while they're quite good, they don't have the seductive oomph of the 454. It continues to be the most consistent roast I've found, always delivering that smooth luxe profile between raw and bitter. The aroma is full and deep, the body is complex with hints of leather and dark chocolate, and the finish is a warm slow burn of char and earth notes. Honestly, at this level coffee can only become different, not better. I've yet to find a worthy challenger.

I keep it in its bag or an airtight container, grind with a burr grinder on medium-fine, and use the recommend amount, which I also described below. My in-laws visited for Thanksgiving, and I served it with a little whipped eggnog on top. Oops. Made it harder to get rid of them...be careful with this stuff. I recommend busting it out for true coffee lovers and people you'd like to keep around longer. Or just hoard it like I do. Bah Humbug!

Salud,
R

*
(Original review from 2016)

If you're reading this, you're a coffee purist like I am (others call us snobs, but we all know better.) And like me, you've been disappointed all too often by recommendations that have led you to more of the same-- acidic, flat, unremarkable brews. Starbucks, Coffee Bean-- even Peet's can be overrated, and the only thing they consistently provide is inconsistency. However, the 454 from Kicking Horse, while a bit pricier than our usual fare, is worth every penny. It's a delicious, lush roast with hints of baker's chocolate, a smooth finish, and very low acidity. In sum, it's a superb coffee. In my quest for the ultimate cup--which is not over, but has dramatically narrowed--I also found some terrific advice for getting the most mileage out of your beans.

First, a burr grinder really does make a difference. I used my old blade grinder for years, and my coffee was always decent. However, the more I read, the more I thought about trying one. I bought a Cuisinart, the $45-ish jobby. Short story is that instead of pulverizing the same beans over and over, which makes your grind size inconsistent, it grinds the beans once as they pass into the hopper, and you can control the coarseness. I'd get one.

Next, search online for articles about how much coffee to use; there's lots of great info abounding. Boiled down, they say that bean to water ratios matter, and they're right. It's 55 grams of coffee to one liter of water. Sounds like a pain to measure, but it's not. Once I got a cheap scale here on Amazon ($10 or so) I figured out how much my press and carafes held, and used some basic math to dial in the right amount of coffee. It was easy, and our presses and carafes hold similar volumes. Anyway, I just poured the beans into a measuring cup, took note of the mark, and put the scale away.

I also tried veering away from my permanent gold filter. Sacrilege, maybe, but my wife likes her coffee less gritty, and I wondered if sacrificing the natural oils vs. the grit was a good trade. It was. In fact, I'm coming to prefer the paper filter taste (Melitta non-bleached), or rather, the texture, over the gold filter. I still like the permanent filter, although my French press beats them both. Medium-course grind from the Cuisinart, six minutes in sub-boiling water, stir once, and it's like nothing I've had before. Sinfully aromatic, big mouthfeel, and eminently enjoyable. I don't think I've had a better cup of coffee. It also makes a great pot of drip, noticeably better. And regardless of what anyone says, your own preferences are paramount. What's best is what you like the most. Drip, press, single cup it--choose your weapon.

But I'm burying the lede. The quality of the beans makes the cup more than anything else, and the Kicking Horse 454 is superior to most coffees I've had; it vastly outclasses all the bitter slop we've been led to believe tastes good. I've also tried the Kick Ass, and I prefer the 454. It's roastier and richer. I've also noticed that some reviewers say that the 454 tastes burnt, heavy, etc. Of course, we all have our own taste buds, but I respectfully submit that this is bunk. The 454 is my new mainstay because I dislike burnt, heavy coffee as much as I dislike weak, acidic coffee. The 454 has exceptional balance.

If nothing else, it's worth your while to try it. Experiment with your brewing methods like I did. I've finally arrived at a consistently excellent brew, and I'll warrant your thoughts about coffee will change if you do the same.
Page 1 of 2

Related products