Archive for the ‘Letters and News’ Category

BBQ Drum, HGDB Roasting

Monday, January 27th, 2014

Q:   I wonder if you can give me some guidance.  I’m thinking about buying the following drum roaster to be used in conjunction with my outdoor gas grill: http://www.rkdrums.com/index.php/en/products/drk/2lb-roasters-sample/product/216-rk-2lb-drum-2lb-max Mostly I expect to do half lb batches which is about 25% of the max load.  I’ve never used one of these so I thought I’d see if you know anything about it or care to comment.  I know I’d have to rig up some sort of fan quenching device but I don’t think that will be a problem.  I’d like your thoughts if you have any.

A:  …haven’t visited RK Drums for a while. they’ve updated the site by a lot. My dad uses a BBQ drum roaster sometimes and all he’s said is that he goes through more gas than he’d like.  Other than that, especially with only half a pound, you’re probably going to do well.

The length of roast will be a bit longer than a hot air roaster, so you’ll tend to get a bit more body as a side effect. But half a pound is pretty small, so that will speed things back up.  Dad is probably trying to roast as much as he can per batch so it would for sure take him a while.

Have you ever tried using a heat gun? they’re pretty cheap and there’s a lot of control possible, especially because eight ounces isn’t a lot of coffee.  But I think the RK drums are a well proven way to go.

You can build a super cooler out of a bathroom exhaust fan, from a walk down the heating duct isle. F ind a colander that nestles in some big duct and it just about builds itself.  Just suck ambient air down through the beans and in a minute you’re cold.  We have perfect colanders on our site.  The real usefulness of a cooler is just to stop the roasting in its tracks. After that its just cooling down enough so you can handle the beans.

If you wanted to spend a bit there’s also the Gene Cafe Roaster.  It roast up to 10 ounces at a time with control over heat and time, with a readout of where things are. Plus you can see the beans roasting.

But with the RK drums is definitely worth buying something from them rather than trying to build a drum from scratch.

‘jumped around a bit but I hope that’s useful info.

Q: I like the idea of a drum since I don’t have to worry about it breaking and if I want to, I can roast larger batches although I think a half pound is enough.   The only headache is that I’ve got to roll out the grill, set it up, pre-heat it and so on so I think it’s a little project for a small batch which I’m usually in a rush to get done.

I haven’t tried a heat gun but I have one collecting dust.  I figured it would be tough to get an even roast or consistent results.  Do you just spray the beans in a bowl from the top? What do you think the life span the Gene is if you do a roast say every 7-10 days?  Does it do OK at FC+ or Vienna?

A:  I like the Genes a lot. Chaff collection is good, the beans are visible, there’s lots of control, you can roast a few ounces up to about 10 ounces. I think they’re well priced for what they do. Some fanatics will say the cooling isn’t fast enough, but they’re wrong :) The only thing you may be concerned about is smoke control in larger/darker batches.  But that is true for any roaster. One thing the Gene has designed in is the ability to attach 3″ metal tube to it to route the smoke somewhere.

If you’re only roasting once a week or so the roaster should last many years. I just had a customer ask me about replacing the heater for a gene he bought in 2007. I don’t know how many roasts he’s done on it but he buys beans regularly.  Some people have killed there machine prematurely but what’s true with any of the roasters is that back to back roasting will shorten their life.

Heat gun roasting is easy. After a few tries you’ll be an expert. If you Google HGDB  (Heat Gun Dog Bowl) you find some old articles that go into way too much depth. Essentially you need a metal container that won’t tip over. One hand to hold the heat gun and one hand to do some stirring with a wooden spoon.

Stick the nozzle close to the beans and start stirring. By holding the heat gun closer or farther away you can control the heat instantly. You MAY want to work with a clock or just roast intuitively.  Chaff will go all over the place but on the bright side you don’t need to winnow them. Some heat gun will run on cold too, so there’s your cooler. The whole process might take fifteen minutes plus or minus depending on batch size and degree of roast.

Roasts will tend to even out over time or just sneak up on them in the beginning with less heat and apply more heat as they turn tan. Watch that you don’t scorch them in the beginning.  Once the moisture is driven off roasting will pick up speed.

One of my customers uses the side burner on his BBQ and a heat gun together. That seems like overkill to me, but he goes for as big a batch as possible.

A small batch with a heat gun might take 6-7-8 minutes. Going for a whole pound at once might take 20 or so.

 

Yes, the website has been updated

Monday, November 30th, 2009

Yes, the website has been updated. As of Thanksgiving weekend 2009 we are running a new shopping cart. It should look familiar to you, although a lot of improvements have been made underneath.

There will be some house cleaning to do for a while, a lot of details to tidy up, and it’s a crazy time to relaunch the site, but it needed doing. If you find some errors in the site or you find navigation confusing PLEASE LET US KNOW.

We hope you LOVE the new functionality of the site.

We’re sorry, but your old passwords and logins will not work with the new site. It was a decision made in order to move forward. If you need some info about prior orders, just ask us.

Please create a new account and enjoy the site.
When you’re logged in it does even more tricks than when you’re just browsing.

Thanks for being with us. We’re on our way to twelve years of bringing you great coffee, and the best service we can muster. It hasn’t been one second of dull yet.

Thank YOU.
Thanksgiving 2009

The Coffee Project (link back to the site)

Specials and Coupon codes

Monday, April 7th, 2008

Don’t forget to occasionally really read our splash page for changes in specials and coupon codes.

For instance we’re moving along some of the Cocoa nibs that sold brilliantly over the holidays, but now its time to move ‘em along. Right now they’re free with any order. Can’t beat that.

If you ever want to be on our email list that announces new beans, news, and yes, Sales on items; just write to us and ask to be on the list. Easy.

Why send a mailer out after a deadline has passed?

Wednesday, January 23rd, 2008

Thanks to the many, many, many, many, many of you that pointed out that the recent emailer went out a week after the deadline of the promo mentioned.

Here’s what happened. Those were supposed to go out a couple weeks ago but the computer that sends them stalled. When it started up again last night, out went the emails. So, just a simple glitch in the system.

I have turned the code back on for a little while. So dive in, use the coupon code mentioned.

Beaming Behmor !

Tuesday, November 13th, 2007

This just in from a happy customer!

“Thanks for registering my Behmor 1600 and getting it into my hands in such a timely manner.

I received mine at 10:30 this morning, re-read V3.3 of the manual for the umpteenth time as well as your tip sheet. Having over a 150 lbs of home roasting experience (Toastmaster popper and IMEX CR100) I went straight to a 8 oz roast of Columbian using the default settings and hit the cool button as soon as 2nd crack started. Beautiful, even roast.

Impressive machine. Easy to use, easy to clean and exceptionally quite compared to what I was using before. The Behmor 1600 It is everything I had hoped it would be.

There was quite a bit of smoke leakage from the top of the door during the “dry burn” but it decreased significantly on the first real roast. Just a few wisps when it went into the cooling cycle. I’m sure it will continue to diminish as the machine “seasons” itself.”

Yay!!!

News from Zephyr

Friday, September 7th, 2007

News from Zephyr- David Kastle of Zephyr coffee tells us this:

“Despite its impact on certain coastal communities in Nicaragua, Hurricane Felix seems to have had little or no effect on coffee production in Honduras, Nicaragua, Guatemala or El Salvador. Considering it was poised to follow the devastating path of Hurricane Mitch in 1998 (more than 11,000 dead in Central America), this is a tremendous relief for many reasons.”

July News

Sunday, July 15th, 2007

July News

* The Coffee Project now has a limited selection of 3 oz beans packages.
why 3 oz?

Just open and pour in your fresh roast for no measuring.
Or open and pour two packages into your HW for no measuring.

* New Beans on our site Sumatra Harimau Tiger
Harimau is Indonesian for tiger, and this bean lives up to the name. Deep and rich as a Sumatran should be, with an earthy body, subtle fruitiness and a very pleasant, dry acidity.

Roast it to full city …or just a whisker past, and let it rest a day or two to tame some of the wild notes and develop the body and fruit. As an espresso you pick up a bit of an almond quality.

* The Coffee Project now has tea!

– Darjeeling FT Org Black Tea
– Green Tea with Pomegranate
– Lapsang Souchong Black Tea
– Organic White Tea with Peach
– Rooibos FT Tisane
– Ti Kuan Yin – Oolong – Iron Goddess of Mercy

All tea packages are loose leaf, by the ounce.
(go for the tea bundle and get all six teas, plus one extra for free)

* The July/August issue of Roast Magazine is here!
One free per order.
This issue includes:

– RoastBusters –
Fridge, Freezer, Cupboard; Bean Storage Comparison

– The Firestarters –
Q & A with Rita Fox of RoZark HillsCoffee Roastery

– Navigating origins –
Hawaii

– Cracking the Phenol Code
Coffee is good for you
Whats all this about Phenols?

– The Job of Roasting
Ergonomics and Safety in the Roastery

– The Bottom Line on Packaging
What you need to know to maximize profit through efficient packaging

– 3rd Annual Demitasse Poetry Contest Winners

– Advertiser index
– Classifieds
and more

* The Brazil Natural Dry is back in stock
Natural Dry means the beans are dried right on the tree. Really good as a SO espresso, this time adding a bit of an almond quality.

* The Coffee Trees are ready to travel. (As if ounce baggies aren’t enough like the 1970s, now you can grow your own.)
Thanks for your patience! The trees are ready to ship.

* Hey, is your birthday in July or August? Use “July BD” as the coupon code before 7/31/07 and take 10% off your cart contents!
Is Your birthday in August? Use “August BD” as the coupon code for 10% off before 8/31/07.

Happy Summer!
(don’t forget… iced …. tea)

Info sheets in the bags

Monday, June 4th, 2007

any chance of adding the info sheets about coffee beans in the bags with the beans, like you used to? I found that incredibly helpful, as a reminder to have on hand whenever I get new beans or beans I haven’t roasted in a while. Helps to have those notes for roasting and flavors to expect.

I’ll probably start doing the info sheets again. Enough of them had gone out of date and others that hadn’t had masters made that it was getting unwieldy having two sets of papers to stuff in; so I went all in one direction figuring the info was online anyway. Better to be uniform than scattered.

But I agree its better to put the complete info in each bag. And, there’s also the opportunity to put better notes in them since so many have to be built up from scratch anyway, it just takes time.

So yes sooner or later when I can either do it myself or get a minion on it they’ll all go back to the more complete page of info all at once.

How much smoke does the I Roast II generate?

Thursday, April 26th, 2007

A customer who normally roasts outside with a heat gun would like to upgrade to an I Roast that he can use inside. However, he’s worried about the smoke.

Smoke is a byproduct of coffee roasting, no matter which roaster you’re using. However, this doesn’t mean that you’re relegated to the back yard forever! There are ways to manage the smoke and the mess. You didn’t mention how much coffee you usually tackle with your heat gun roaster, but this is a factor. More coffee = more smoke. The I Roast II does a very efficient job of chaff collection, which will cut down on your mess significantly. You can also set roast profiles, which you will find improve the quality of your roast. But, let’s talk about the smoke. Do you have a hood over the stove that vents to the outside? If so, you can position the roaster under the hood and it should take care of the smoke problem for you. If you don’t have such a hood, then you can do a few other things to vent the smoke from your roaster.

The I Roast comes with an attachment that fits on top of the chaff collector. This is an adapter that will allow you to position a 4 inch dryer vent hose on top of the machine. You can then redirect the smoke out a nearby window. It does leak a little bit, but the bulk of the smoke will be redirected.
Here is a product that one of our customers found to be helpful to her in her venting efforts.

A second option that works well is to roast in front of an open window or patio door. Position a fan directly in front of the opening, blowing OUT. Then place the roaster on the other side, so that the smoke is being sucked out the window. You can turn the fan on low at first, then turn it up when things get a little smokier at the end. This is a method I use at home and it works well. I live in Wisconsin, so yes, at certain times of the year, I’m blowing out some of my heat with the smoke when I roast, but I don’t find it to raise the heating bill significantly, and it does keep the smokey smell out of my curtains.

If you set the I Roast II on your kitchen counter with no fans and no vents and let it fly with a full charge of beans, you will most likely set off your smoke alarms, so you’re going to want to find a way to vent the smoke if you want to roast indoors

More information about the I Roast II:
http://www.coffeeproject.com/roasters/hearthware.html

Gene Support

Wednesday, November 29th, 2006

No mention of support or warranty for the Gene in your site. Alpen has given great support, but it takes forever. I am sure I will buy the Gene, but I would like to know the warranty; I guess it is too new a product to have any track record on breakdowns.

The Gene roasters have a standard one year manufacturer’s warrantee. Warrantee and support are carried out by Fresh Beans Inc, the same people who produce the Fresh Roast Roaster. There are a few companies that carry the Genes now but ultimately it all leads back to fresh Beans inc.

We’ve had zero reports of defects or problems with the Gene roaster. The biggest issue is just that its a very different machine than the other roasters. Its roasting a lot more at once so the time for roasting is much longer than a tiny Fresh Roast. It also takes some practice to anticipate how much longer the beans will continue to roast once the Cool button is pushed, or the timer runs down. So no problems with the machine’s function or manufacturing; and although its very very intuitive it does take some practice to discover how to use a new tool.

It does smoke. More beans means more smoke so thats something to consider.

I’m very happy with mine. The one thing I wish was a little improved is the internal cool down. The machine has a command to stop the drum during cool down for external cooling. I’ve been using that feature a lot. The additional benefit of that drum stopping feature is that since the machine is already hot back to back roasting can be done by putting in another charge of beans and staring the cycle over immediately.