• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Coffee Review

The World's Leading Coffee Guide

Advanced Search

  • Reviews
    • Latest Reviews
    • Top 30 Coffees of 2024
    • Top-Rated (94+)
    • Espressos
    • Best Values
    • Taiwan Coffees – 台灣送評的咖啡豆
    • Single-Serve Formats
    • Reviews by Country of Origin
    • Reviews by U.S. City
    • Green/Unroasted
    • Advanced Search
    • Equipment Reviews
  • Reports
    • Latest Reports
    • Africa
    • Americas
    • Asia-Pacific
    • Espressos
    • Annual Top 30
    • Processing Method
    • Social/Environmental
    • Tree Variety
    • Blends
    • Equipment
  • Equipment
    • Equipment Reviews
    • Equipment Reports
  • Journal
    • Top 30 Coffees of 2024
    • How Coffee Review Works
  • About
    • Our Story
    • Kenneth Davids
    • Our Team
    • Our Advertisers
    • Learn
      • Interpreting Coffee Reviews
      • Reference
      • Glossary
    • Contact Us
  • Trade
    • 2024 Editorial Calendar
    • Becoming an Advertiser
    • 2024 Media Kit
    • Campaign Package Deals
    • Getting Coffees Reviewed
    • Quoting Reviews
    • Award Certificates
  • 中文 – Chinese
    • 評介和獎章宣傳使用條款
    • 台灣送評的咖啡豆
    • 如何將您的咖啡送評
    • “行銷攻略” 促銷活動

Shop for top-rated coffees at Durango Coffee Company

Shop for Top-rated coffees at Barrington Coffee Roasters

Shop for top-rated coffees at Kakalove in Taiwan


A Brief, Early History of 100-Point Coffee Reviews

June 21, 2013 by Ron Walters

I was curious who received the first 90-point coffee review, which lead me to re-read the first Coffee Review article from 1997.

Wow!

“I have been convinced that the time has come to start assigning numerical rankings to cuppings as my counterparts have been doing for some time with wines, beers and cigars. These rankings are expressed as a number from 0 to 100….” – Kenneth Davids, Coffee Review, February 1997.

… and so began 100-point coffee ratings in the specialty coffee industry.

In 1996, I had convinced Kenneth Davids that, with enough caveats, one could rate and review coffees like wines.  We thought objective 100-point reviews would help consumers make better purchase decisions.  We thought quality-oriented farmers and roasters should be rewarded for their efforts.  We decided to give it a shot.

We sought the advice and support of a group of distinguished coffee professionals.   We spent the latter half of 1996 developing a Coffee Review cupping form that provided structure and consistency to evaluating and rating coffees on a 100-point scale.  We assembled a cupping board, a Who’s Who of coffee experts that participated in a number of early cuppings.  Their support offered credibility and strength in numbers.

So, in early 1997, we started posting an article and reviews to “the world wide web” each month.  Given Google Analytics wouldn’t exist for nearly another decade, we had little idea who, if anyone, was visiting our website.  Email was almost unheard of so we mailed paper copies of a newsletter to a couple hundred interested readers.   We started to get phone calls from consumers (not from mobile phones, mind you) who wanted to know where to buy high-scoring coffees.  Given that few coffee roasters had websites, we would give callers roasters’ phone numbers.

I digress.

Flash-forward 16 years, more than 200 tasting reports and 3000 reviews.  It’s amazing to see how much technology and the market has changed.  However, the basic concept and market forces are still at work, just on a larger scale. We host more than a million unique visitors on our website every year.  We don’t have to lick stamps or answer the phone much any more but we do email our newsletter to nearly 100,000 readers each month.  We use social media sites to share the latest news.  Roasters report that good reviews drive a significant increase in sales.

Oh, and back to my original question: who received the first 90-point coffee review?  In our first article in 1997, we reviewed house blends.  Steep & Brew and Green Mountain Coffee Roasters  scored the first 90-point ratings for their Breakfast Blends (93 and 90 points, respectively).

Buoyed by these early favorable reviews, we’re pleased to see that these two roasters are still going strong.

Filed Under: Journal

Primary Sidebar

Shop for top-rated coffees at Durango Coffee Company

Shop for Top-rated coffees at Barrington Coffee Roasters

Shop for top-rated coffees at Kakalove in Taiwan

Become an advertiser

Get Coffees Reviewed

 

Connect with Us

Sign Up for Our Free E-Newsletter

Enter your email address below to receive our free e-mail newsletter
  • Coffee Reviews
  • Tasting Reports
  • Reference
  • Glossary
  • Please Support Our Advertisers
  • Contact Us
  • Journal
  • Kenneth Davids
  • Interpreting Coffee Reviews
  • Roast Definitions
  • Caveats about Coffee Ratings
  • Editorial Calendar
  • Getting Coffees Reviewed
  • Advertising Opportunities
  • Quoting Reviews
  • Copyright
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Site Security

Copyright © 2024 Coffee Review. All Rights Reserved.