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I'd say just get the best coffee you can get. You're talking numbers that are similar to leaving a light on all day. You also only live once, enjoy it within reason. This seems like an expense that is negligible.
Now that I'm nearly retired, of course I'm getting paranoid about the cost of living even though it should not be a problem by a long shot.
For coffee, I got a burr grinder and a cheap espresso machine for $100 that still does 15 bar.
Just bought a bag of covfefe coffee, but at $20+ bag, it's not the most cost effective product. If it's killer though, I might make it semi-regular.
Fine coffee powder is espresso, it's not for the drip coffee makers.
Just try going almost anywhere in the world and try to find a cup of coffee that's anywhere near as good as the worst brewed pot of Folgers coffee.

I think powdered coffee works better even in drip coffee makers. Maybe you get a fine silt at the bottom of your coffee cup, but that doesn't bother me. I just want the extra flavor.
The Germans make wonderfully intense coffee. I lived there for two years and got to love that style.
I stopped drinking coffee when the government mandated that it be laced with mRNA from aborigines.
I drink coffee black without any sugar or dairy in it.
Nothing worse than aborigines peeing in your coffee.
If you can do that with the Cuban coffee you mentioned earlier, I will take my hat off to you.
Cuban coffee is about the only sweetened beverage I'll drink.
Patrick, if you live near a Portuguese enclave out there in Cali, try a Galão (Ga-loan).
One other non-obvious benefit to coffee: if you're susceptible to gout, coffee is one of the small handful of foods that actually help in reducing serum purine levels in the blood (the other one is cherries, but they do a number on my lower GI).
If I manage to hit a certain sweet spot, coffee makes me very happy and productive for a while. Can't be too much or too little.
What's your coffee habit? What does it cost you?
Peets
People call Peet’s strong, but it is really over-roasted. A lot of roasters call it burnt.
My economy daily drink is Trader Joe’s Columbian Medium Roast. Vacuum packed so it stores well.
Other thoughts-
Brew coffee at home, go out if you want an espresso
Best economical burr grinder: Baratza Encore. Rugged, rebuildable, great customer service.
Keep your habit at 1-2 cups a day.
People call Peet’s strong, but it is really over-roasted. A lot of roasters call it burnt.
I also like to toss a cardamom pod into the coffee grinder sometimes. It's a fun flavor.
some of my best work was done in the kitchen grabbing a cup of Joe and catching up with colleagues, from the top brass to the new interns.
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I like to grind it to powder, because that clearly gives more surface area to extract flavor. I don't see why anyone should ever grind less than that. Big chunks of coffee bean can't possibly give you as much flavor or caffeine, just weaker coffee. A waste of money.
I also like very strong coffee. I suppose that's just a matter of taste, but I just don't understand why anyone would like weak coffee at all.
Now that I'm nearly retired, of course I'm getting paranoid about the cost of living even though it should not be a problem by a long shot. So I calculated that my 1 lb bag of Peets House Blend whole beans at $15 results in a cost per cup (with 15 grams of ground coffee) of about 49.5 cents. Say 50 cents.
Can I get that quality of roasted beans for less?
I considered buying unroasted "green" beans and roasting them, because that's only about half as much per pound, but roasting coffee looks pretty involved, maybe not worth the effort. You've got to get them very hot, well ventilated, and keep stirring them, then quickly cool them. Gives off some noxious gas and a kind of chaff, so you can't just use a toaster oven.
What's your coffee habit? What does it cost you?