





🔥 Wake Up and Kick Ass with Every Bold Brew!
Kicking Horse Coffee Kick Ass is a dark roast whole bean coffee, certified organic, Fairtrade, and kosher. Sourced from Indonesia and South America, it features a rich flavor profile with chocolate malt, molasses, and licorice notes. Roasted in the Canadian Rockies, this 10 oz pack of 6 supports sustainable farming and delivers versatile brewing options for the discerning coffee lover.






C**F
This coffee is worth more than five 🌟
This coffee is superb. Very good flavor, no after taste and smooth. The packaging is great. It's shrink wrapped. The only thing I would change is the bag should be resealable with the little tabs on each side like most other brand have, but I just put it into a plastic baggie so it's not concerning enough to dock any points. Excellent coffee. So glad I chose it. I will definitely buy again and recommend it to everyone.
Z**.
Good Everyday Coffee
This coffee is strong, which I need in the morning. It's not too bitter, and the beans smell great when you grind them. I usually add a little cream, but it's good black too.
N**E
ChatGPT recommend
Just for fun, I asked ChatGPT to recommend a drip coffee, and it suggested this one. It had a funny name—Kick Ass—but the aroma and flavor were incredible and totally blew me away. From now on, ChatGPT is going to be my go-to teacher in life.
S**B
Would love to buy this coffee in a standard-size bag for better value.
Enjoyed the taste of the coffee, Rich and bold, yes, but in a 10-ounce bag it seemed a bit like buying shoes a couple sizes too small. Not the overall best value. If they go to a more standard size 12-oz bag I'll try it again. I 'get' that they're trying to eek out an extra 20- or 25% profit, but I'm looking for best value when there are so many good-tasting coffees to choose from at better price-per-ounce ratios.
F**I
Best cup of Joe I have had in years!
Best cup of Joe I have had in a long time. I always wanted to try this brand and blend and decided to get the 2.2 lbs bag of bean a go and boy was I in for a treat. Best coffee I have had in years! Love this company! Quality beans done the right way,.
R**Z
Good stuff
Really excellent darkroast coffee beans.
B**D
Average
I'm new to the coffee world and recently got a nice manual whole bean grinder Aeropress, and Mocapot to enhance my coffee experience. I am a foodie and liquor snob so I enjoy eating and drinking but only because of flavor profiles and how each flavor plays off one another. I like dark roasts and drink my coffee black, espresso style with a volume between short and long. I enjoy bitter notes and flavor that punches you in the throat without a grainy finish where each sip electrifies the taste buds without puckering your cheeks, but also having enough volume to be able to sip coffee in the morning. As I am getting into the coffee world my first brand was Petes Dark Roast. It was lightyears better than my Nespresso but in comparison to other brands it falls short. My second brand was Mayorga Muy Mucho, which is my favorite brand to date, however I wanted other brands to choose between. I freeze and vacuum seal my beans for freshness and rotate between brands each week. I had heard good things about Kicking Horse but this bag fell through for me. The flavors seem immature in comparison to Mayorga and the taste is a much watered-down version of what I had gotten used to. I know that Kicking Horse has some other dark roasts but I'd rate the flavor as average and because of that I'm not interested in trying additional flavors. I have incorporated expresso vodka from Van Gough Distillery into my espressos and a dash of burbon cream, both from Mayorga and Kicking Ass, and when blind taste tested Mayorga comes out on top for both me and others I served.The packaging was fine, everything about the company was fine, just not a flavor that I enjoy. If you enjoy rich, bold, dark roasts, try Mayorga Muy Mucho instead.
E**0
This is THE ONE!
Once upon a time, my husband and I used to buy a cup (at least) of coffee shop coffee every day. Eventually, we decided we should just make coffee ourselves at home: buy the packaged coffee shop coffee, make it on our home coffee maker, done and done, right? Well, not so much. The coffee we made at home just didn't taste the same as it did in the coffee shop, and we couldn't figure out why. So we researched. What we found was that there are about a billion variables to making a good cup of coffee. And after all our research regarding methods and equipment along with a bit of trial and error, we now have our home coffee making perfected to our liking. I'd like to caveat this by saying that I am by no means an expert on this stuff--just a regular person who did a lot of research and figured out what PERSONALLY works for me, and if anything I say here happens to help someone out who was in the same shoes I was, then that's great.First off, the coffee maker. We brew our coffee in a Technivorm Moccamaster (apparently one of the few consumer coffee makers that actually heats the water up to be hot enough to reach the ideal temp for making coffee--probably the biggest reason why our initial attemps at home coffee making failed. It's pretty pricey, but you can replicate the same results for much cheaper using a $15 pourover contraption, though it'll involve a more manual effort on your behalf. Another alternative at $150--still somewhat pricey, but about half the cost of the Technivorm--is the Bonavita; if the Bonavita was around back when we were researching coffee makers 3 years ago, we probably would've opted to get that one instead, primarily for the cost savings. The Technivorm was our best option at the time, though, so that's what we got, and we're still extremely happy with it, even after 3 years of daily use.).Just as importantly, we make sure to use high-quality whole bean coffee [stored well if you're not using the whole bag within a week (we use the Friis coffee vault) since CO2 and light are not friends to coffee beans. We also freshly grind just enough whole beans for that particular brew cycle just prior to brewing, and we use a good quality BURR grinder--in our case, the Capresso Infinity burr grinder. Refer to Alton Brown's coffee episode if you're curious why it's so important to use a burr grinder as opposed to a blade grinder.]. We eventually realized we weren't huge fans of a lot of the whole bean coffees easily obtained in supermarkets or large chain coffee shops (I'm looking at you, Starbucks), yet didn't like paying shipping for the coffees from independent, small-batch roasters (as good as those coffees were, I really, REALLY hate paying for shipping). As such, I turned to my trusty Amazon Prime to save the day. I found Kicking Horse Coffee Kick Ass Dark Whole Bean Coffee via the stellar reviews, placed an order, and hoped for the best (2.2 lbs. is a lot of coffee to have if it turns out I didn't like it). Thankfully, I'm happy to say that I've found THE ONE! This coffee is complex, deep, and smoky, yet without any burnt taste at all. And the fact that it's fair-trade and organic is icing on the cake. And (AND!) if that weren't enough, it's quickly and easily available on Amazon Prime AND part of their subscribe-and-save program. WIN!Extra tips:- Preheat your carafe and coffee mugs by filling with hot water and discarding before using so that the cold carafe and coffee mugs don't steal all the heat from your freshly brewed coffee.- Only use good quality, filtered water for brewing.- Make sure you grind your coffee according to how coarse/fine is recommended for the particular coffee you are using, and make sure you use the correct proportions of coffee to water (for those who have European coffee makers such as the Technivorm, keep in mind that a cup of coffee made in these coffee makers is typically less ounces than in American coffee makers).- Clean your burr grinder on a regular basis by using the white rice method. This is especially important if you grind oily coffee beans such as Kicking Horse Kick Ass Dark.
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5 days ago
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