@trickydick - do you have a vario with the steel burrs? I love mine; superb grind quality. I wouldn't worry about the fines building up. In my experience that stuff doesn't break loose so nothing to worry about.
Roasted two 1# batches of columbian origins on my ghetto roaster. I turned the dial all the way up, from 400F to probably 500F (silkscreen completely worn off in that area). It's not obvious if the turbo oven has any real thermostat or if it's just cycling power to the element to simulate.
My roasting time went from 20m down to 14m. 1st crack between ~9 minutes. That's a medium City+ roast. Cupping will happen next week. Roast appears to just as uniform as before, even better maybe. I'll get a picture up here later today.
My roasting time went from 20m down to 14m. 1st crack between ~9 minutes. That's a medium City+ roast. Cupping will happen next week. Roast appears to just as uniform as before, even better maybe. I'll get a picture up here later today.
@trickydick - do you have a vario with the steel burrs? I love mine; superb grind quality. I wouldn't worry about the fines building up. In my experience that stuff doesn't break loose so nothing to worry about.
really excited to hear your review on this roast.
a 9 minute time to 1C is fantastic on just about any coffee. id like to see that picture of the roast to understand the develop post 1C a little better. sounds like a long stretch, ESPECIALLY for a columbian coffee. might be awesome for espresso but for drip i like to keep my finishing times around 1.5-2 minutes.. ish; depending on the coffee of course. if you're able to stretch out your 1C development for that long though it sounds like you have very good control over your roast, so congratulations!
If anyone is interested, Bodhi's sale this week is this Burundi: http://www.bodhileafcoffee.com/coll...t-7-green?mc_cid=1fa1b6c919&mc_eid=68998bb514.
It's $4.85/lb with code GAHARO7.
I had some of this from a while ago and I roasted it in February but I didn't take good notes as to how well I liked it. I tend to really enjoy Burundi coffee, but I also have 15 lbs of other east African's arriving today so I don't know how much I want to stock up on!
There are plenty in that $5 price range on that site is this one so Superior I should get 5 pounds. Also I thought Sweet Maria's was the gold standard. My first order was from home roast does it matter? Thanks man
I thank the thread for reminding me to roast as most of my coffee went in a keg of stout this morning.
A Columbian micolot I figure I couldn't mess up to bad. View attachment 364177
this post has me grinning from to ear. so excited to hear your results on the brew. a columbian wouldn't be my first choice for a beer addition, but it would certainly be in the conversation & an interesting point to debate!!!
although the lighting on your picture casts a dark hue to the color of your coffee, i can tell by the tight seems & light wrinkling that you didn't take this roast too far. it may have possibly been a hot one though & if this is the case, beware of roasting to a "medium rare" level (dark on the outside, light in the middle). that type of roast can quite easily be polarizing
I believe you can get up to 12 lbs of beans for the same price, so maybe try a few others. I've had some good Guatemalan beans from them before for $5ish a pound.
I think Sweet Maria's does a great job promoting and describing their beans. I have struggled to find many other places that match the details of each coffee (maybe Burmans, but it still isn't as good of information as Sweet Marias gives).
The thing about SMs though is you pay for it. I don't buy from them unless I'm purchasing 5+ lbs of a single bean because otherwise the cost per lb is too high.
Roasted the last of the Columbian from my first green beans (thank you everyone here for the inspiration). First little cracks were happening around 4:40 fully cracking at 6 again. Went to 7 minutes 40 seconds. The decision is so Split Second. This was the darkest I think I've ever had a roast go. It was smoking like a snuffed out piece of wood. Really really smoking. As always hard to get a picture. Looks nice and dark now. Last picture in the Sun. It looks so different inside and outside. Doesn't even look that dark outside. Is that massive smoke plume time when you get to second crack?
I've frozen, shaken, and still had beans with lots of chaff left on the outside. I think beans need some serious shaking to completely get rid of the chaff.