Friday, June 19, 2009

Coffee Roasting Honed

Stephanie took it upon herself to photo document the entire coffee roasting process a few weeks ago. Both the machine and the process have been highly refined since last time. Andy got an old grill for free so he cut it down and mounted the roaster semi-permanently over the existing burners. We upgraded to a 5/8" shaft and reinforced the shell. It now dons a hopper with a valve, and the fanciest modification is the adjustable drum. This way, we can manipulate the location of the drum on the fly.



Here it is in all of its glory. It will comfortably roast a pound of coffee in under ten minutes.Here is a close up of the fancy adjuster. The end of the shaft is threaded and is free to move within the bearing. The cylinder extending from the bearing is secured to the shaft collar on the bearing as well as the nut on the threads. Therefore, if you hold the shaft and turn that collar, the shaft will be adjusted in our out by the threads. This allows us to adjust for the expanding and contracting of the drum. The weight of the door is the only thing that keeps the beans in while they roast. You can see the chaff resting on the machine. Maybe one day we will install an after-burner, but for now it is just a messy process.While roasting, I continually assess the progress by the sound of the beans cracking, the smell of them roasting, as well as continual visual inspections using the tryer shown below. The difference between a light light roast and charcoal is only about 120 seconds.

Here is an action shot of the beans being dumped! You can see the flame below! They look perfect!
This last photo is of my beautiful mother overseeing the high-tech cooling process. It actually works remarkably well. Note that the fan is blowing down. If it was blowing up, the coffee beans would be everywhere! That's it folks! If you want a pound send an email to bumblesboast@hotmail.com We should have a label soon!


5 comments:

  1. i still don't understand the bumble's boast name

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  2. Love it- amazing, ingenious, scarey-looking! -tom

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  3. Ryan, Great look to the unit. Any more details/pics you can share about the design and workings would be cool. Chris

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  4. Wow - Harvest Moon was a fav stop on way to ski home over 30YAG. River Ranch was very good also. Good to see active home roasters out there and to think some rave about charbucks.

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  5. Great information you've posted! I think finding out lots of best online coffee beans information is so helpful for roasting the beans and learning nice techniques.

    Finding high quality fresh coffee beans online can be just as difficult as finding them in person. So many times you can't taste ahead of time and I'm at a loss for figuring out how to choose which bean is right for me. If anyone knows how to find the gourmet coffee beans online, please let me know!

    ReplyDelete