According to the Specialty Coffee Association of America, a single pound of coffee is enough for 48 6-oz cups of coffee. On Starbuck's website, a 1-lb of coffee yields approximately 64 5-oz cups.
Rule of Thumb for Brewed Coffee Yield
Bag Size (pounds) | Bag Size (ounces) | Number of standard cups of brewed coffee |
1/2 lb. | 8 oz. | 41 (9 oz. cups) |
3/4 lb. | 12 oz. | 62 (9 oz. cups) |
1 lb. | 16 oz. | 82 (9 oz. cups) |
5 lbs. | 80 oz. | 410 (9 oz. cups) |
-http://leverheadcoffee.com/faq-about-coffee?id=86
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This jives with my experience. and since coffee bags are not 16 oz anymore - more often between 10 and 14, and since I make 8 or 12 oz cups of coffee, I'm thinking about 30 cups a bag - about a month's worth. Which also matches how much I thought I spent a week for coffee.
I don't remember when bags of coffee stopped being a pound. although if you order whole beans online they are still mostly sold by the pound. Grocery store bags of ground coffee tend to be just 12 oz.
One theory that might explain this is that a 12 oz bag of ground coffee fits in a quart mason jar. Maybe back in the day when coffee came in cans this wasn't an issue.
And back in the day when coffee was sold in cans they always included a coffee scooper. I save a bunch of these and still use one. They all are right around 3 tbsp. I'm thinking it might have something to do with coffee makers. Maybe like 12 oz of coffee is a minimum for a Mr. Coffee.
I used to make 12 oz every day. but now I've cut down to 8 oz so I have to measure out two tbsp. I have my eye out for a two tbsp scooper.
@KLS52
Even tho you like your coffee so thick you can stand a spoon in it. and so strong that it kicks your a$$, you might be able to save some money by changing to expresso. You might also try switching to an Immersion process coffee maker. The AeroPress is like a french press but better. and even faster than pour-over. Another option is the Clever Coffee Dripper. It is also a "full immersion" coffee maker - but it looks and works like a single cup pour-over. The advantage of full immersion is that you get more coffee out of the beans.
Neither option is expensive and they might pay for itself if you can use less coffee in a cup.
BTW I have an OXO single cup coffee maker. I like it cause it's very handsfree. but it does take a lot longer than a regular pour-over. In fact, it takes such a long time that the coffee cools quite a bit.