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Just Paws! Brazilian Green Coffee
Just Paws! is our Brazilian green coffee, sourced for buyers who want brazilian green coffee beans in their truest, most unroasted form, or roasted fresh to their own preference. Brazil remains one of the world's great coffee origins, and this lot carries the low-acid, mellow character the country is known for. Whether you're searching for brazilian green coffee beans wholesale for a small-batch roasting project or simply want a bag roasted-to-order in Toronto and shipped to your door, this coffee is built to be approachable and easygoing from the first cup.
Unlike a lot of single-origin coffees that lean bold or acidic, this lot is quietly balanced. It's the kind of bean that rewards a light hand at the roaster and plays well across brew methods, making it a smart pick whether you're a home roaster, a curious first-timer, or someone who just wants a dependable everyday coffee without any sharp edges.
Flavour Profile
Expect a soft, clean cup with a smooth, easy body and none of the harshness some origins carry. A light fruitiness sits in the background rather than up front, giving the coffee gentle depth without tipping into tart or jammy territory. The sweetness is neutral rather than syrupy, so the overall impression is quiet, rounded, and easy to drink any time of day — a fair baseline expectation for raw brazilian coffee beans before you've made a single roasting decision of your own.
What "Green Coffee" Actually Means
Green coffee refers to raw, unroasted coffee — the seed as it comes off the plant, dried and processed, but never exposed to a roaster's heat. It doesn't taste like coffee at all in this state; the compounds that create coffee's familiar aroma and flavor only develop during roasting, through a chemical process called the Maillard reaction (the same browning reaction responsible for seared meat and toasted bread). That means single origin green coffee beans like this one are a blank canvas: the same lot can taste noticeably different depending on how far you take the roast, which is exactly why home roasting has become such a popular hobby among people who already care about fresh coffee.
If you've never roasted before, the barrier to entry is lower than most people assume. You don't need a dedicated machine to start — a lot of home roasters begin with a stovetop pan, an oven, or even a hot-air popcorn popper, before eventually moving to a dedicated home roaster if the hobby sticks. Roasting takes somewhere between 8 and 20 minutes depending on your method and desired roast level, and the sensory feedback loop (watching the beans change color, listening for the "first crack" sound that signals the start of light roast territory) is honestly part of the appeal.
Why Choose Brazil for Your First Home Roast
If you're new to home roasting and shopping for green coffee beans for home roasting for the first time, Brazil is one of the most forgiving origins to start with. Brazilian arabica green coffee tends to roast evenly and predictably — its density and moisture content are well understood by roasters, which means fewer surprises compared to some higher-altitude, harder-bean origins that demand more precise timing. It's also low-acid by nature, so even a slightly uneven early attempt at home roasting is unlikely to produce a sharp or unpleasant cup. Save the trickier, more temperamental origins for once you've got a few roasts under your belt.
Sourcing and Grading
We sell this specific lot as a standard-grade Brazilian green coffee, sourced through importers working directly with growing cooperatives rather than anonymous bulk brokers. Some Brazilian green coffee is sold under varietal-specific labels — brazil yellow bourbon green coffee beans, for instance, refers to a specific cultivar known among home roasters for a touch more sweetness than standard-varietal lots. We keep things simple and consistent with a well-graded standard lot, which keeps brazilian green coffee beans price reasonable while still giving you real, traceable Brazilian character to work with.
Who It's For
This coffee suits home roasters looking for reliable brazilian green coffee beans to practice with, as well as everyday drinkers who prefer a mellow, low-acid cup over something bright or intense. It's also a solid entry point if you're new to single-origin Brazilian coffee and want to understand the flavour before trying bolder origins — since you control every variable, you can dial the roast toward exactly what you already like, rather than relying on someone else's roasting decisions.
Roasted or Unroasted: Choosing the Right Option
You don't have to roast this yourself if that's not what you're after — you can choose your roast level right on this page, from green (unroasted) through Light, Medium, and Dark, using the variant selector. We roast to order, so whatever level you pick is roasted fresh after you order rather than pulled from a shelf. If you want the exact same origin already roasted and ready to brew with zero equipment required, our roasted Brazilian coffee is built from a comparable lot and is the more direct option for anyone who wants great Brazilian coffee without taking up home roasting as a hobby.
For grind, select whole bean or a specific setting (drip, espresso, French press, and more) in the options above if you choose a roasted level. Whole bean is recommended if you plan to grind just before brewing for the freshest possible cup.
Shipping and Freshness
Every bag is roasted to order in Toronto after you place your order (or shipped raw immediately, if you select the green option) — nothing sits pre-roasted on a shelf waiting for a buyer. We ship across Canada, with orders over $50 qualifying for free shipping, whether you're placing a one-off order to try home roasting or you're a Canadian buyer looking to buy green coffee beans canada-wide without the import hassle of ordering directly from an overseas exporter.
A Simple First-Roast Walkthrough
If this is your first time buying unroasted brazilian coffee beans and you're not sure where to start, here's a realistic first attempt using nothing more than a dry pan or a hot-air popcorn popper: spread a small batch (a cup or so) in an even layer, apply steady heat, and keep the beans moving constantly, either by stirring or by the popper's natural airflow. You'll see the beans shift from green to yellow to light brown over several minutes, and somewhere in that window you'll hear a sound like popcorn popping — that's "first crack," the point where light roast officially begins. Pull the beans off the heat shortly after first crack for a light roast, or continue a little longer for medium. Immediately transfer them to a colander or metal bowl and shake or stir to cool them quickly; residual heat keeps cooking the beans even after you've removed them from the pan, so cooling fast matters more than people expect.
Expect some smoke and a distinctive papery "chaff" (the dried skin still clinging to some beans) to come off during roasting — do this near a window or with a fan running, and don't be surprised if your first batch or two isn't perfect. Home roasting has a real learning curve, but a forgiving origin like this one means even an imperfect early attempt will still produce a drinkable, low-acid cup rather than something harsh or undrinkable.
Rest Before You Brew
Whether you roast it yourself or have us roast it for you, freshly roasted coffee actually benefits from a short rest period before brewing — typically 24 to 72 hours. Coffee releases carbon dioxide for a few days after roasting (you may notice a bag looking slightly puffed up), and brewing too soon after roasting can produce excess crema on espresso or uneven extraction on drip and pour-over. If you're roasting at home, resist the urge to brew immediately off the roaster; portion your beans into an airtight container and give them at least a day before your first cup.
Is Home Roasting Actually Worth It?
It's a fair question, and the honest answer is: it depends what you're after. Cost savings are real but modest once you factor in equipment and the learning curve of a few less-than-perfect early batches. What home roasting actually delivers is control and freshness that's difficult to get any other way — you decide exactly how light or dark, you know your coffee is roasted the same day you drink it, and there's a genuine satisfaction in the process that a bag of pre-roasted beans, however good, can't replicate. If you're coffee-curious and enjoy hands-on hobbies, it's a rewarding one to pick up. If you mainly just want a great cup with the least effort possible, our pre-roasted Brazilian coffee will get you there faster with no equipment required at all.
Exploring Beyond Brazil
If home roasting turns into something you enjoy, Brazil is really just the starting point — our full green coffee collection carries unroasted lots from several other origins, so you can compare how the same roast profile plays out on beans grown at different altitudes and processed differently. A higher-grown, denser bean from somewhere like Guatemala or Ethiopia will behave differently under heat than this Brazilian lot, often needing a slightly longer roast to develop fully, which is exactly the kind of hands-on comparison that makes home roasting genuinely educational rather than just a way to save money.
And if you want to see this same Brazilian character in a broader context — other roasts, other formats, what makes this origin distinct — the Brazilian coffee collection page and the rest of our roasted coffee lineup are both worth a look before you decide whether green or roasted is the right call for you.
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FAQ
What roast levels are available?
You can choose your roast level right on this page, from green (unroasted) through Light, Medium, and Dark, using the variant selector. We roast to order, so whatever level you pick is roasted fresh after you order rather than pulled from a shelf.
What grind options do you offer?
Select whole bean or a specific grind (drip, espresso, French press, and more) in the options above if you choose a roasted level. Whole bean is recommended if you plan to grind just before brewing for the freshest cup.
How fresh is this coffee, and how fast does it ship?
Every bag is roasted to order in Toronto after you place your order, not roasted in advance and warehoused. We ship across Canada, and orders over $50 qualify for free shipping.
What does green coffee mean, and can I drink it?
Green coffee refers to raw, unroasted beans. If you select the green option, the beans won't taste like coffee until roasted, so this option is intended for home roasters rather than direct brewing. Choose any of our roasted levels if you want a ready-to-brew bag.
Do I need special equipment to roast green coffee at home?
Not to get started — many home roasters begin with a stovetop pan, an oven, or a hot-air popcorn popper before investing in a dedicated home roaster. A basic setup is enough to learn on; you can upgrade equipment later if the hobby sticks.
How long does green coffee stay fresh before roasting?
Unroasted green coffee is far more shelf-stable than roasted coffee — properly stored (cool, dry, away from direct sunlight), it can hold its quality for a year or more, which is part of why home roasters often buy in larger quantities than they would roasted coffee. That long shelf life is one of the more underrated advantages of buying green: you can stock up without the same freshness clock ticking that applies the moment a bag comes off the roaster.