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Should You Be Storing Coffee in a Coffee Canister?

Coffee canisters promise to keep your coffee fresh, but are they necessary? We tested three popular models to find out.

By
Ashley Rodriguez
Ashley Rodriguez
Ashley Rodriguez is an award-winning writer and podcaster specializing in all things coffee. Originally from Miami, Ashley has been making coffee since 2010, working as a barista, shop manager, and coffee trainer in New York, San Francisco, and Chicago, where she's currently based.
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Updated July 25, 2024
Best coffee canisters displayed with bag of coffee on counter

Serious Eats / Ashley Rodriguez

Straight to the Point

If you're looking for a great coffee storage solution, our test showed the vacuum-sealed Fellow Atmos kept coffee freshest for the longest.

Most bags of coffee have enough beans to make about 16 cups. Of course, this depends on how you brew your coffee. But, roughly speaking, if you drink a cup of coffee a day, a typical bag will last about two to three weeks—that’s approximately how long most roasters would estimate a bag of coffee stays fresh. 

Not everyone finishes a bag of coffee within that time frame, and you might have noticed the brew from the last batch of beans tastes significantly different than the first. When roasted coffee begins to stale, all its lovely components—the aromatics, sweetness, and acidity—fade. Over time, your coffee might taste flat, even rancid. So what’s a coffee sipper to do as they slowly work through their bag of beans? What about the coffee enthusiast who buys multiple bags of beans, toggling through their selection but ultimately slowing down how quickly they go through their stash?  

One possible solution is to store your coffee in a coffee canister: a container whose expressed purpose is to keep coffee fresher for longer periods of time. But do you really need one? Or is storing it in its bag just as good? We tested out three different types of canisters to figure it out. 

What Is Fresh Coffee, Anyways?

A hand pouring ground coffee into a pour over coffee maker's filter

Serious Eats / Ashley Rodriguez

Freshness in coffee is a weird thing. For one, it’s not quantifiable—there’s no real expiration date, although some bags have somewhat meaningless dates that are one to two years after roasting (and some roasters are experimenting with “best by” dates). And regardless, coffee doesn’t go bad in a way that can make you sick. If you drink a very old bag of coffee, the worst it can do is taste not great. Also, freshness can’t be visually assessed just by looking at the beans, and there’s no one flavor or giveaway sign that a coffee's stale. 

I talked a little bit about freshness in my breakdown of coffee blooming and bubbles. Coffee is an agricultural product—think of it like any other food item we grow and eat—and like most foods, oxygen is what causes coffee to stale. Roasting creates carbon dioxide (CO2) inside coffee beans, and, in a way, CO2 acts almost as a shield around coffee, protecting it from oxygen. But CO2 eventually leaves coffee beans in a process called degassing, so coffee begins to lose that protective layer over time. 

However, unlike most food items, freshness does not have a linear relationship with flavor and quality: In fact, most roasters recommend letting your coffee rest for at least a few days after roasting, and our understanding of resting and peak freshness has morphed over time. I remember when I first started as a barista and thought anything five to seven days off-roast was old, and now I barely bat an eye at a coffee that’s been resting for two-plus weeks. CO2 acts as a shield against coffee going stale—but it also acts as an inhibitor to extracting flavor from your grounds. Some folks even recommend waiting as long as eight weeks to enjoy a bag of beans, depending on the roast profile—lighter roasted coffees will release CO2 slower than darker roasted beans because their cellular structures aren’t as open (so CO2 has a harder time moving through the inside of a coffee bean, even though less CO2 is created with lighter coffees).   

And, to complicate things more, it’s important to note that “resting” a coffee usually means storing it in a container with a one-way valve (the valve lets CO2 out as the coffee degasses but doesn’t let oxygen in)—not simply that a bag of beans will stay tasty for that long. Every time you open a bag of beans and jostle it around, you’re displacing CO2 and letting oxygen in. Some coffee roasters even go as far as to recommend only scooping beans out from the very top layer of your bag so as not to disturb the coffee below. Freshness is such a complicated topic in coffee that scientists are studying how it works to understand better what’s going on in coffee as it stales. 

Are Coffee Canisters Necessary?

A hand holding a coffee bag open

Serious Eats / Ashley Rodriguez

If you were to ask me 10 years ago if coffee canisters were a necessary coffee tool, I would have said yes. I remember a time when leading coffee brands used what essentially amounted to a fancy version of a brown paper bag for their packaging, closing the tops with a tin tie—which did nothing to preserve freshness. 

But now? Almost all coffee bags have two key features to preserve freshness: one, they almost all have a one-way valve, which I mentioned earlier. One-way valves make sure that the CO2 from your degassing coffee has somewhere to go. Secondly: Most coffee bags have zip-top seals, making them an effective displacement container, especially if you take the added step of squeezing the excess oxygen when you seal the bag. Some coffee companies go an extra step, doing things like nitrogen flushing the bag to displace oxygen when being sealed. 

In this test, I used the bag my coffee came in not just as a control, but also as a viable coffee canister in its own right. I wanted to see if the zip-top closure and the one-way valve did enough to keep the coffee fresh. 

Types of Coffee Canisters

One hand holding the lid of a coffee container and the other holding the body of the container

Serious Eats / Ashley Rodriguez

Although most coffee canisters claim to do the same thing—keep coffee fresh—not all canisters are made the same. Coffee YouTuber James Hoffmann tested out a range of coffee canisters on his channel, and he sorted them based on three categories: 

  • Airtight Containers: An airtight container is pretty self-explanatory: it keeps air out. Almost anything with a twist-off lid (think Mason jars) will keep air out of a container, and can also be handy for keeping out other contaminants like dust or bugs. 
  • Displacement Containers: These types of containers involve some sort of mechanism to displace air out of a container. One way to visualize how these kinds of containers work is by pushing out the oxygen of a zip-top bag.  
  • Vacuum-Sealed Containers: Vacuum-sealed containers pump oxygen out of containers to create—you guessed it—a vacuum within the container. The vacuum produces a pressurized seal that prevents oxygen from coming in. 

Hoffmann’s video tests about a dozen coffee canisters, and he picks one canister in each category that he thinks performed well, although he notes at the end of testing that he didn’t see a huge difference in flavor between the styles of canisters. 

I wanted to hone in on that observation. I can speak on and on about freshness and its complexity, but in a real-life scenario where I’m brewing coffee at home, would I be able to tell the difference, taste-wise, between each style of canister? I chose the three canisters Hoffmann singled out—the Coffeevac, the Airscape, and the Fellow Atmos (which we were already fans of)—each representing a category of canister styles, to put his final conclusion to the test.

The Tests

A person using their hands to press air out of a coffee canister with its lid

Serious Eats / Ashley Rodriguez

I ordered a coffee roasted by my friends at Lost Sock Roasters in Washington, D.C., and I specifically picked a darker-roasted coffee to speed up the oxidation process. My coffee was roasted on October 19th, I opened it on October 26th and divided out four equal doses of coffee amongst the three containers and the bag that the coffee came in (which featured a zip top and one-way valve). I then left the canisters alone for eight days and brewed coffee with beans from each container using a Kalita Wave and a brewing recipe of 30 grams of coffee to 500 grams of water. 

Each canister worked a little differently: 

  • The Coffeevac simply had a button you pressed to put on and take off the lid.
  • The Airscape has both a lid and a plunger with a handle you use to press the air out.
  • The Atmos has the most innovative design feature—unlike most vacuum-sealed canisters, which usually have a detached piston you have to use to pressurize the container, the Atmos dispels oxygen by twisting the lid back and forth rapidly. After about 30 seconds, a small green dot will show up on the lid to indicate the canister is pressurized (you have to check in on the canister every five days or so and repressurize).

I decided that I wanted to primarily rely on taste assessments here because I saw a disconnect between how we talk about freshness and the actual implications freshness has on the way folks at home were consuming coffee. Sure, a coffee that’s been open for a month might not be super fresh, but if it still tastes good, that shouldn’t matter. Likewise, I saw folks recommending super long resting times, but that felt impractical for most home consumers. How many people are buying bags of coffee to let sit on their shelves for weeks before opening? 

A closeup of pourover coffee brewing into an amber container

Serious Eats / Ashley Rodriguez

However, I did want to see if the canisters would affect brewing times: in general, coffee goes through sort of a bell curve in terms of how quickly it brews. Samo Smrke, a scientific associate at the Zurich University of Applied Sciences, did an experiment with espresso extraction and found that “very fresh coffee was flowing fast. A coffee that aged a bit flows slower but then once it’s getting really old, it starts to flow again faster.” I wasn’t sure if this was replicable with drip brewing, nor did I duplicate Smrke’s brewing conditions (they used, as they described during their talk with the Specialty Coffee Association, “a fresh coffee, a two months old coffee, and a days-old coffee.”) However, all the brewing times were within 20 seconds of one another: 

Brewing Times, By Storage Method
 Coffee in bag 3:24
 Coffeevac 3:16
 Airscape 3:17
 Fellow 3:36

I then tasted all four after letting each cup sit for five minutes, and then I randomized the cups and had fellow Serious Eats writer Jesse Raub taste them (I couldn’t provide anonymized results since I had to brew the cups one at a time, so I knew which cup was which based on temperature). I had him give me his impressions and compared them to my own. 

In general, none of the coffees tasted that much different from one another, but both Jesse and I were able to group the coffees into two separate groups. We found that the Airscape and the Coffeevac cups were indistinguishable from one another but flatter than the coffees from the Fellow and the coffee bag. We also found the coffee brewed from the Atmos and the coffee bag more vibrant, with the Atmos edging out the coffee bag just a bit—but not by much. I doubt I’d notice the difference if I wasn’t looking for it. 

The Conclusion: Most Coffee Canisters Aren't Worth It (with the Exception of Vacuum-Sealed Ones)

A hand pressing down the top of a vacuum-sealed coffee storage container

Serious Eats / Ashley Rodriguez

This sort of feels…anticlimactic, right? I felt the same way Hoffmann felt at the end of his video. “The results, from a taste perspective, were not what I hoped them to be,” he says. I wanted there to be big, surprising results, but there weren’t, which leads me to the same conclusion Hoffmann makes: “That would also mean, in many situations, I would also be happy storing coffee in a resealable bag.” 

So the first place to start when considering buying a coffee canister is how you buy coffee: if you order beans online or buy bags from your local coffee shop, the best piece of advice I can offer is to buy coffee from roasters who make resealable bags. Squeeze out any excess oxygen anytime you open the bag, and make sure to store your coffee in a cool, dark place (we didn’t talk much about this, but I specifically chose non-transparent canisters to test since light can affect aging and staling). 

The Best Coffee Canister

But if you buy your coffee in bulk or regularly share beans with others, an airtight container like a Mason jar will do well for you, unless you really want to step up your freshness game—then I’d skip over any airtight or displacement canisters and go straight for the Fellow Atmos. Not only did it keep coffee the freshest and the best-tasting of the bunch of canisters we tested, but its design features made it easier to use than similar models. 

FAQs

What other elements should I consider when storing coffee? 

You want to keep your coffee away from light, heat, and moisture. In this experiment, we only purchased canisters that were opaque, although many manufacturers sell glass or clear canisters, which are fine as long as you store them in a dark place like a cabinet or drawer. 

Can I store ground coffee in a canister? 

In the airtight and displacement ones, yes, but not in the Fellow Atmos. According to the Fellow website, “Storing ground coffee or very fine substances may clog the intake valve and prevent a proper vacuum seal.”

What size coffee canister do you need?

Air is the enemy of coffee (well, at least it'll speed up the beans' degradation), so the best-size coffee canister holds roughly the amount of beans you'll go through in two or three weeks. The Fellow Atmos we recommend comes in three sizes: 0.4, 0.7, and 1.2 liters. Most households will get by just fine with something in that range.

Can I use a coffee canister for other items? 

Yes! If you're looking for other pantry storage, there’s nothing about most canisters that are specific to coffee—tea, spices, or anything that could degrade over time when exposed to oxygen. But be mindful and read the instructions to make sure you can use your canister for other things. For example, Fellow suggests you shouldn’t store ground coffee in their Atmos canisters since the particles could clog the intake valve. 

Should I store coffee in the freezer?

While you can store coffee in the freezer, it's not the best storage practice. Constantly reaching in for a scoop for you daily brew causes temperature fluctuations (which causes moisture buildup in your beans), making the coffee taste stale. If you're looking for a short term storage solution (say, two weeks) and won't touch the coffee, then freezing it is likely fine.

Do coffee beans expire?

Roasted coffee beans will have either a "roasted on" or "use by" date listed. Either way, they're not likely to spoil or become unsafe to consume. (Just avoid getting them wet, which could cause mold to grow.) That said, the longer you wait to brew coffee beans, the more stale they will taste.

Why We're The Experts

  • Ashley Rodriguez has been in the coffee industry since 2010. She worked as a barista, a manager, and a coffee educator before pivoting to writing about coffee in various trade publications as well as her own newsletter and podcast. Ashley has written many Serious Eats reviews, including those of espresso machines and French presses.
  • Ashley's research for this piece included listening to a lecture podcast from the Specialty Coffee Association and a video from former World Barista Champion James Hoffmann.
  • For this review, we set aside the same coffee in its original packaging and three different containers for eight days and then brewed the results and conducted a blind tasting to see which kept the coffee the freshest.

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