Copper Moon Coffee Launches Limited-Edition Roast Honoring NASA's Artemis II Mission
Copper Moon Coffee's $15 Artemis II Lunar Reserve donates 20% of proceeds to STEM scholarships ahead of NASA's first crewed lunar mission since Apollo.

Copper Moon Coffee, the family-owned roastery out of Lafayette, Indiana, released a limited-edition organic coffee timed to NASA's Artemis II mission, pledging 20% of proceeds to STEM education through the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation.
The Artemis II Lunar Reserve, priced at $15 for a 12-ounce bag of grounds, is available exclusively through CopperMoonCoffee.com while supplies last. The roast carries a medium body profile, and the company's product page lists tasting notes of almond, berries, and hibiscus with a clean start and smooth aftertaste. The press release distributed at launch described a different flavor set: chocolate, toasted nut, and raspberry — both sets are present across Copper Moon's own materials.
The timing is pointed. NASA has targeted April 2026 for the Artemis II launch, a 10-day test flight aboard the Orion spacecraft that would mark the first crewed mission beyond low Earth orbit since the Apollo era. The four-person crew includes Christina Koch, who is identified in Copper Moon's press materials as an Astronaut Scholar Alum. The Astronaut Scholarship Foundation, the direct beneficiary of the roast's proceeds, supports STEM students — making the connection between the cup and the cause more than nominal.
Brad Gutwein, CEO of Copper Moon Coffee, framed the release in terms of both history and investment: "Artemis II Lunar Reserve honors a historic step forward in human exploration and reaffirms our commitment to investing in the students and innovators who make progress like Artemis II possible."

Copper Moon describes the roast as "crafted for clarity and forward momentum," language that tracks with how the company positions its community-driven releases generally. Whether the organic certification is USDA-verified and where the beans are sourced were not disclosed in available materials.
With the Artemis II launch window now weeks away, the limited-edition designation is not marketing boilerplate — once the mission moment passes, so does the roast's reason for existing.
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